Chase David Wayne Briscoe (born December 15, 1994) is an American professional stock car racing driver and team owner.
[1] In 2013, Briscoe applied for the Peak Stock Car Dream Challenge, a contest rewarding the winner with a ride at Michael Waltrip Racing.
[2] Despite winning the majority of on-track races, he finished second behind Patrick Staropoli in the challenge.
[1] Later in the year, he made his NASCAR K&N Pro Series West debut at NAPA Speedway where he finished eighth.
[5] Briscoe moved from Indiana to Charlotte, North Carolina in 2014 in hopes of making connections in the racing world.
[9][1] In 2017, Briscoe joined the newly formed Ford Performance NASCAR Driver Development Program and the Camping World Truck Series team Brad Keselowski Racing, driving the No.
[10] Briscoe finished third at Daytona in his Truck Series debut by avoiding a tremendous wreck on the final lap after running top ten almost all day.
Briscoe earned his first career Truck Series pole award at Dover International Speedway and finished 12th in the event.
[15] In July, Briscoe earned his second career Xfinity Series win at Iowa Speedway.
He qualified for the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs, on the back of posting 10 straight top-10 finishes.
[16] After sponsorship troubles threatened to take Briscoe out of the seat, he secured enough funding to run the 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.
[17] At Darlington, after his wife suffered a miscarriage, Briscoe earned his fourth career Xfinity Series win after holding off Kyle Busch.
[18] He recorded additional victories at Homestead, Pocono Raceway, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Dover International Speedway, Bristol, Las Vegas in the fall, and Kansas;[19] the Indianapolis win came in the inaugural race on the track's infield road course.
[20] In the final race at Phoenix, he fell behind the other three championship drivers due to a poor-handling car and spun with two laps remaining.
[19] On October 20, 2020, Stewart–Haas Racing announced that Briscoe would be promoted to the Cup Series in 2021, replacing Clint Bowyer in the No.
HighPoint.com, which sponsored Briscoe's Xfinity car, followed him to the Cup team,[21] as well as Ford Performance Racing School.
[22] In March, Briscoe returned to the Truck Series to compete in the inaugural Bristol dirt race, where he drove the No.
Briscoe had a breakout race in the inaugural Verizon 200 at the Brickyard, leading most of the early stage and running in the top five.
He placed third at the 2022 Daytona 500, missing out on the win by 0.091 seconds to Bubba Wallace and winner Austin Cindric.
14 after a post-race inspection revealed a counterfeit engine panel NACA duct; as a result, the team was docked 125 owner and driver points and 25 playoff points, and crew chief Johnny Klausmeier was suspended for six races and fined US$250,000.
Briscoe's father Kevin and grandfather Richard are both involved in sprint car racing, Kevin being a former Truck Series driver and a five-time track champion at Tri-State Speedway and Bloomington Speedway, while Richard has worked as a car owner for drivers like Rich Vogler and Dave Blaney.
* Season still in progress 1 Ineligible for series points (key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time.