Supercars: Road to Glory now available to watch on Amazon Prime
Thrilling and emotional documentary captures tension of 2025 finale
Chaz Mostert, Broc Feeney, Will Brown, Kai Allen star in doco
It’s a dream week for Supercars fans as racing returns, along with the release of the anticipated documentary on the action-packed 2025 Repco Supercars Finals Series .
Now available to watch on Prime Video, Supercars: Road to Glory is a warts and wall recount of the dramatic finale, the bp Adelaide Grand Final.
Shot by Apatchie Media, Road to Glory goes behind the scenes as Broc Feeney, Chaz Mostert, Will Brown and Kai Allen fight for the championship.
Apatchie, alongside footage from Supercars Media, goes behind the scenes with drivers and teams, capturing exhaustive trackside footage sequences from garages, press conferences and signing sessions. The end result is Supercars like you've never seen it before.
After watching the feature length documentary, we’ve picked out the most memorable and defining moments of Road to Glory.
The foreshadowing
Viewers go on the journey with Triple Eight Race Engineering as Feeney passes comments about engine misfires as early as Thursday. Only three days later, the issue would rear its head. In an earlier debrief, in eerie foreshadowing, Feeney tells his team: “I literally pull the gear and I feel like the engine dies.”
“We can beat him”
The scenes of the Saturday race, where Feeney wins and Ryan Wood steps aside for Mostert, are relived through the eyes of both sides. Feeney is followed to the podium, ironically, with KRE Engines boss Ken McNamara. However, viewers are also taken into a debrief with Mostert, Wood and Walkinshaw team leaders. There, Mostert hails his crew for helping him recover from 12th, while Wood is clear about the target for Sunday “We can beat him.”
Rookie and the seasoned pro
One of the great stories of 2025 was the emergence of Penrite Racing rookie Allen, who reached the Grand Final. Key to Allen’s change was veteran engineer Alistair McVean, who was an underrated star in Road to Glory. From sly smiles to encouraging words, McVean’s influence on Allen is revealed in detail throughout. Even if the moments are short, they are impactful.
“I love you Marty”
Perhaps the most jarring sequence in the documentary is the contrast between Mostert and Feeney as they make their way back after the end of the final race. Mostert fights back tears, saying: “I’m lost for words boys.” The most telling words are uttered by a tearful Feeney, who tells an equally devastated engineer in Martin Short: “I love you Marty… we’re gonna get it one day.”
The raw emotion
One thing Road to Glory captures brilliantly is immediate emotion, hanging off every driver’s reaction as they digest the race with their teams. Notably, Brown doesn’t hide from the fact he faces an uphill battle throughout the weekend, while the typically stoic Allen also fights back frustration. There is the anger of Mostert after Saturday qualifying, when an electrical issue ruined his qualifying hopes, before Walkinshaw Andretti United explodes into life as Mostert wins the crown. The most powerful scenes emanated from Triple Eight, though, after Sunday. Feeney quipped that Mostert was a “deserving champion,” but insisted he was “disappointed” at how WAU “carried on” after the controversy of lap 1. The sight of Jamie Whincup choking back tears was also a sight Supercars fans have rarely seen.
The season-opening DUNLOP Sydney 500 begins on Friday, with free entry for all fans to watch the first race of the season on DUNLOP Free Friday. Tickets are on sale now.