Chase Briscoe labeled the ‘top candidate’ to join Joe Gibbs Racing in 2025

Chase Briscoe has been labeled the “top candidate” to replace Martin Truex Jr. at Joe Gibbs Racing in 2025.

On Thursday afternoon, The Athletic’s Jordan Bianchi reported that Martin Truex Jr. is expected to announce his retirement at Iowa Speedway this weekend. Truex would leave after the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season and give Joe Gibbs Racing a significant opening in the No. 19 car. However, one driver has already been labeled as the top candidate for the ride.

According to several reports, [autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag] is the top candidate to replace Truex in the No. 19 car at Joe Gibbs Racing. Briscoe currently drives for Stewart-Haas Racing but is looking for a ride after the NASCAR team announced its decision to shut down after 2024. Briscoe would be united with close friend Christopher Bell.

This would be a great career move for the driver of the No. 14 car. While Briscoe owes a lot to Ford for his current situation, it’s hard to pass on Joe Gibbs Racing. The NASCAR organization is a powerhouse in the Cup Series and will compete for championships yearly. Nothing is official, but Briscoe joining Joe Gibbs Racing would be his best-case scenario.

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Joe Gibbs Racing linked to two Stewart-Haas Racing drivers for 2025

Joe Gibbs Racing has been linked to two Stewart-Haas Racing drivers for 2025. Which two Ford drivers could join Toyota next season?

[autotag]Joe Gibbs Racing[/autotag] “expects” Martin Truex Jr. to return for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season, but no official decision has been made yet. If Truex does retire, it opens the door for one of NASCAR’s best organizations to need a driver. In that case, two notable drivers from Ford have been mentioned as possible replacements.

[autotag]Noah Gragson[/autotag] and [autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag] could be possible replacements at Joe Gibbs Racing if Truex retires, according to FOX Sports’ Bob Pockrass. Briscoe could be a “possible candidate,” while Gragson’s ties to Bass Pro Shops, a major sponsor of the No. 19 car, shouldn’t rule him out of a potential return to Toyota.

Joe Gibbs Racing has good options in the lower levels of NASCAR, such as Chandler Smith, but could desire a driver with more experience in the Cup Series. If the NASCAR organization believes that experience is the better route, it could open the door for Gragson or Briscoe to drive the No. 19 Cup car in 2025.

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Chase Briscoe will be a hot commodity in NASCAR silly season for 2025

Chase Briscoe will be a hot commodity in NASCAR silly season for 2025. Find out what a team executive said about Briscoe hitting the market!

[autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag] is unsure where he will be for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season. Briscoe has a team option for 2025; however, Stewart-Haas Racing is “likely” to sell all four NASCAR charters before next year. Briscoe has already been labeled the “frontrunner” to join Wood Brothers Racing, but could other teams be in hot pursuit?

According to The Athletic’s Jordan Bianchi, Briscoe would be in demand if he reaches free agency. One team executive told Bianchi that Briscoe is the kind of talent “you find a way to sign even if you don’t have a spot.” After the 2024 Coca-Cola 600, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver sits 16th in the point standings, 11 points behind Chris Buescher for the NASCAR playoffs.

Briscoe has been impressive after a tough 2023 NASCAR season. The driver of the No. 14 car has one top-5 finish and five top-10 finishes through 14 races in 2024. Last year, Briscoe only had four top-5 finishes and eight top-10 finishes. Briscoe will be a hot commodity in NASCAR silly season if he reaches free agency, and it will be interesting to see what comes from it.

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2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race odds, picks and predictions

Looking at the odds for Sunday’s 2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro, N.C., with NASCAR expert picks and predictions.

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The NASCAR Cup Series returns to North Wilkesboro Speedway Sunday for the 2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race. Green flag is scheduled to drop shortly after 5:30 p.m. ET (FS1) for the Open, and 8 p.m. ET (FS1) for the All-Star Race. Let’s analyze FanDuel Sportsbook’s lines around the 2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race odds, and make our expert NASCAR picks and predictions.

2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race: What you need to know

  • Joe Gibbs Racing driver Ty Gibbs starts 1st in the 100-lap All-Star Open lineup on Sunday. Gibbs was 2nd in last season’s Open
  • Stewart-Haas Racing driver Josh Berry won last season’s Open at North Wilkesboro to advance to the main event. Berry goes off 7th in Sunday’s Open grid
  • Hendrick Motorsports driver Alex Bowman will start on the outside of Row 1 in Sunday’s Open, and he is the top Chevrolet driver
  • Stewart-Haas Racing driver Chase Briscoe is the top Ford in the Open field, going off 3rd
  • Kevin Harvick stepped behind the wheel of the No. 5 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports in practice and qualifying, as Kyle Larson needed a substitute while away for qualifying for the Indianapolis 500. Harvick was 25th in practice with a best speed of 121.892 mph, while qualifying 12th
  • Team Penske’s Joey Logano secured the pole for Sunday’s All-Star Race with a best speed of 75.206 mph
  • RFK Racing’s Brad Keselowski, fresh off a win at Darlington last weekend, will start on the outside of Row 1, finishing -0.386 seconds back of his former teammate in qualifying
  • JGR’s Christopher Bell is the top Toyota in the All-Star Race, as he’ll start 3rd after a best speed of 74.859 mph in qualifying
  • Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suarez goes off 4th as the top Chevrolet, posting a best speed of 74.835 mph

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2024 All-Star Open and All-Star Race – Expert pick

Odds provided by FanDuel Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated at 1:56 a.m. ET.

CHASE BRISCOE (+900) is a solid value in Sunday’s Open race. We saw last season that it isn’t the favorite who always rises to the top. Briscoe was solid in practice, posting a 5-lap average of 18.734 seconds, and he’ll go off on the inside of Row 2 for the Open.

Briscoe is coming in with a little steam, too, posting a season-best 5th-place finish in the Goodyear 400 at Darlington last weekend. He has finished 12th or better in 4 of his past 6 Cup starts, so he has some momentum. Briscoe also finished 4th in last season’s All-Star race, turning in a Driver Rating of 108.4.

Let’s go with a Chase-Chase pick here. We had Briscoe for the Open, let’s roll with Hendrick Motorsports driver CHASE ELLIOTT (+1200) for the All-Star Race. NASCAR’s most popular driver would be a fan favorite to win at North Wilkesboro.

Elliott was 5th last season, right on the bumper of Briscoe, posting a 96.8 Driver Rating. He moved up from 13th to 5th, but just couldn’t get over the hump for the win. While Elliott wasn’t great in practice, posting a 5-lap average of just 18.387 seconds, he should still be a good play when the lights are brightest.

2024 All-Star Long shot

DANIEL SUAREZ (+8000) has had a decent season, especially early on, already qualifying for the playoffs by way of his victory at Atlanta.

The Trackhouse Racing driver has tailed off a bit lately, finishing 18th or worse in each of his past 4 starts since a 5th-place showing at Texas on April 14. Still, Suarez was a respectable 7th in the All-Star Race last season at North Wilkesboro, and his 113.4 Driver Rating was 2nd-best only behind race winner Kyle Larson last May.

 

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Chase Briscoe labeled as ‘frontrunner’ for this NASCAR team in 2025

Chase Briscoe has been labeled as a “frontrunner” for this NASCAR Cup Series team in 2025? Where could Briscoe be driving next season?

[autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag] has a team option with Stewart-Haas Racing for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season, but the organization may not even reach that point. Stewart-Haas Racing has been rumored to sell its entire NASCAR operation, leaving its four current drivers without a ride. However, Briscoe could be on the move to a historic team in the Cup Series.

Brad Keselowski’s spotter, T.J. Majors, went on his podcast, Door, Bumper, Clear, and talked about NASCAR silly season rumors. Obviously, Majors is well plugged into the Ford camp and labeled the Stewart-Haas Racing driver as a frontrunner for this NASCAR team.

“I would say [Chase Briscoe] would probably be the guy that I would say is the frontrunner [for Wood Brothers Racing],” Majors said. “I think Ford is not gonna let Briscoe go. Now, if that’s the 21, if that’s maybe an [RFK Racing] car, maybe they’re in the market for a charter.”

[autotag]Wood Brothers Racing[/autotag] is unlikely to bring Harrison Burton back in 2025, which would give Briscoe a clear pathway to the No. 21 car. However, Wood Brothers Racing hasn’t been up to its standards, so would they be the best option for Briscoe? There will be a lot of time for silly season to play out, but Briscoe has already been labeled a frontrunner for Wood Brothers Racing.

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Growing SHR ‘study group’ is beginning to pay dividends

Ryan Preece found the Stewart-Haas Racing study group to be a good resource after attending it for the first time this week. He raised eyebrows May 4 when he responded, “Study group I wasn’t aware of,” with a shrugging emoji to a social media post …

Ryan Preece found the Stewart-Haas Racing study group to be a good resource after attending it for the first time this week.

He raised eyebrows May 4 when he responded, “Study group I wasn’t aware of,” with a shrugging emoji to a social media post about his three teammates getting together. It started when Noah Gragson admitted he needed help in his preparation process, and he went to Chase Briscoe, who has a similar style.

The “study group” has evolved to include Josh Berry, who joined for the first time two weeks ago. Other Stewart-Haas Racing personnel are also involved, helping them better understand the drivers since everyone might be saying the same thing but express it differently. Preece joined for the first time this week after seeing the social media post about the group.

“Ultimately I do a lot of prep on my own,” Preece said. “But being in there in that group on Tuesday, people at SHR were able to clip things together and for the 10 to 12 hours of work I do on my own, it condensed it into an hour and a half. I think the biggest thing you can take away from it is just communication among the four drivers. That’s what you don’t have when you do it on your own.”

As for why he publicly responded (and drew attention) to not being previously aware of the group, Preece said, “I wasn’t targeting anybody. The reason I commented what I did was [because] I was taken by surprise, but I felt like that was attacking my integrity as a person who works really hard.

“It doesn’t matter what the results are now from the last two weeks — I take pride in myself [as someone] who works really hard. I know Door Bumper Clear (podcast) and Freddie [Kraft] said, ‘Why comment on it?’ Well, my pride and who I am as a person in my work ethic means a lot to me, and I don’t want the public to think I’m lazy, because I’m not.”

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There has never been an issue of the four Stewart-Haas drivers getting along or working together. All four have repeatedly stated how much time they spend together and how well things have gone since the lineup was finalized coming into the season. It’s been a focus for everyone at Stewart-Haas to work closer together as one team instead of four separate entities.

“It’s something that over the offseason, we all sat down as a group and were trying to figure out if we needed to hire a driver coach or whatever it may be,” Briscoe said. “Me and [Richard] Boswell and Noah and Drew [Blickensderfer] honestly kind of took it upon ourselves about a month and a half ago. How me and Noah study is definitely different than how other guys study, and we needed something to hold each other accountable.

“We just decided we were going to start us two together and see where it grew. It’s grown, and it’s cool to see the progression.”

Briscoe leads the way at 14th in the championship standings. He has four top-10 finishes. Gragson leads the organization with five top-10 finishes, but he’s been fighting to reclaim lost ground, now 19th in the standings, from an early season points deduction (35) for a roof rail infraction.

Berry is 23rd in points and has yet to score a top 10. Preece, whose team was also docked 35 points for the roof rail infraction has one top 10 and is 29th in the standings.

The four have all taken turns at being the best Stewart-Haas car on any given weekend. Texas Motor Speedway, for example, was one event where all four seemed even and ran in the top 15, although the results were scattered in the end due to different circumstances.

“I feel like it helps me [and] Noah feels like it helps him,” Briscoe said. “I feel like there’s still a long way we could go from the standpoint of how we’re building it, but it is nice. [It’s] not just drivers and crew chiefs, now we have engineers in there, and they can kind of hear the drivers being [in] an open dialogue, and I feel like that goes a long way. Even Zippy [Greg Zipadelli] has been sitting in on them.

“It’s been really good for all of us. It’s obviously helped us on the racetrack, but from a communications standpoint, it’s made it where, after practice, I can get out, go to Ryan, Josh or Noah, and the lingo and things we’ve talked about all week…we know. It makes a two-minute conversation a 30-second conversation, so it just makes things way easier from that standpoint.”

Briscoe, Boswell looking for ‘happy medium’ in communication

It didn’t take place at a Chick-fil-A this time, but Chase Briscoe and Richard Boswell had to have a familiar conversation this week. A frustrating night at Richmond Raceway last weekend led to tense exchanges between Briscoe and his crew chief on …

It didn’t take place at a Chick-fil-A this time, but Chase Briscoe and Richard Boswell had to have a familiar conversation this week.

A frustrating night at Richmond Raceway last weekend led to tense exchanges between Briscoe and his crew chief on the Stewart-Haas Racing team radio.

Briscoe wasn’t happy with his race car. Boswell wanted him to focus on driving. During one discussion about their approach to the race, Briscoe was told the team could try something different or run 30th.

“I felt like it was pretty normal for how me and Boswell are [with each other],” Briscoe said Saturday at Martinsville Speedway about the interactions. “There was a little more frustration [at Richmond]. It’s funny, this week we sat down and talked for almost an hour just like, look, I need you to do this different, and he kind of told me things he feels I need to do different.

“Truthfully, I just kind of told him, ‘Would you talk to Kevin Harvick that way?’ We need to find a happy medium of where we’re at now, and what would you do if you had a Hall of Famer driving the car? Obviously, I’m not a Hall of Famer, but I’m also not a rookie. I know what I’m doing at this point, so I thought we had a really good conversation.”

It wasn’t the first time they had to hash things out. Briscoe and Boswell spent two seasons together in the Xfinity Series, winning seven races and finishing in the top five in points. The two were reunited in the Cup Series last season when Briscoe’s team made a change.

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“In the Xfinity Series, the first year, we…not butted heads, but we just didn’t have that chemistry, and we did the same thing,” Briscoe said. “We had like an hourlong conversation and that’s when we started winning all the races. It was kind of one of those coming to Jesus moments again for us, and we kind of joked about it, too, because we did the last one at Chick-fil-A.

“He told me earlier this week, ‘Do we need to go to Chick-fil-A again?’ So, yeah, we talked it out and it was good. I’m looking forward to this week and seeing how it goes.”

Briscoe is 18th in the championship standings going into Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1). He’s led one lap, has four stage points and has two top-10 finishes. In the last three races, Briscoe hasn’t finished higher than 13th.

“Up to the last two weeks, I’d grade us a B or B minus,” Briscoe said. “Then, the last two weeks, we’ve been at a C minus. We just haven’t been very good the last two weeks. I don’t know really what it was to account for that. Richmond has been a place we’ve been very good in the past and we just tried something different, and it wasn’t very good. We tried to copy what we did at Phoenix, which was fairly good, and it didn’t correlate over and we haven’t been good the last two weeks. So, I don’t know.

“We’re definitely way better than where we were last year, but our expectations are just way higher this year, so now that we’ve struggled, it’s been a little frustrating. But I would still say we’re in a really good spot. That’s the encouraging thing. Even last week, we ran absolutely terrible and we still [finished] 18th. Last year, we did everything perfect, and it was like we ran 25th, so we know that we have more speed in our cars and things like that, but we need to clean up a lot of things. Even last week, our pit stops weren’t very good, and we have one of the top five pit crews on pit road. We just didn’t have a very good week altogether. So, hopefully, we can clean it up this week.”

Briscoe was the highest qualifying Ford driver at Martinsville Speedway. He’ll roll off Sunday from the fifth position, his best qualifying effort of the season.

Chase Briscoe responds to Erik Jones’ frustration at Phoenix in 2024

Chase Briscoe responds to Erik Jones’ frustration toward him after Phoenix Raceway in 2024. Find out what Briscoe had to say about Jones!

[autotag]Erik Jones[/autotag] had a fast No. 43 car for Legacy Motor Club at Phoenix Raceway, but a bent toe link in the Final Stage ruined any chance of a good finish. Jones finished in 31st place, despite a fourth-place qualifying effort, and the No. 43 team placed the blame on [autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag]. After the race, Jones expressed his frustration with Briscoe, who he believed was at fault for the incident.

Briscoe, who heard what Jones said about him, spoke to Fronstretch about his side of the story. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver didn’t know why Jones was mad at him and seemed open to a possible phone call.

“I don’t know what I did, I know we were four wide at one point,” Briscoe said. “I got super tight and got into him, I think. I don’t know if that’s the part he’s mad about or what. If he calls me, I’ll gladly answer. I’ve never really talked to Erik before, and I don’t have a problem with him at all, but I feel like we definitely always race around each other. I’m racing hard, I’m trying to do what’s best for my guys.”

It will be fascinating to see what comes from this accident at Phoenix. Briscoe and Jones race around each other a lot, and more drama could be on the way. If what Brisoce is saying remains true, Jones could call him during the week and settle their differences. If not, this could just be one chapter of the story.

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‘This is by far the most excited I’ve ever been for a race season’ – Briscoe

Chase Briscoe has gone through three previous winters as a NASCAR Cup Series driver, but this one has had a different feel. “I think this is by far the most excited I’ve ever been for a race season,” Briscoe said this week on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. …

Chase Briscoe has gone through three previous winters as a NASCAR Cup Series driver, but this one has had a different feel.

“I think this is by far the most excited I’ve ever been for a race season,” Briscoe said this week on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Briscoe begins his fourth season as a Stewart-Haas Racing driver Sunday in L.A. with the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum. A lot is riding on this season, with Briscoe looking to return to victory lane after breaking through in 2022 for the first time. Of course, doing so would mean a return trip to the postseason, which Briscoe was never close to last year.

The No. 14 team finished 30th in the championship standings with eight top-10 finishes. There were not many highlights. However, Briscoe will point out that the season lost all meaning after a counterfeit part on his car at Charlotte Motor Speedway cost the team 120 points and 25 playoff points.

“I think truthfully, last year with us getting that huge penalty in May, outside of winning a race, we weren’t really racing for anything last year,” said Briscoe in explaining why he is so eager for a fresh start in 2024. “If we were in second or third, it didn’t do anything for us points-wise, so it didn’t feel like we were racing for a whole lot outside of a win. From that standpoint, I’m excited to be back in the mix and have a fresh start and clean slate for everybody; just see where we stack up, and I know what we’re capable of.”

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The 29-year-old Briscoe is also eager to lead the way for a new look Stewart-Haas Racing. Alongside Briscoe is Ryan Preece, who enters his second year with the organization. But there are also two new drivers — Noah Gragson, taking over the No. 10 Ford, and Josh Berry starting a rookie campaign in the No. 4 Ford.


“It is a new Stewart-Haas in a sense,” Briscoe said. “There’s a lot of new stuff happening whether it’s the processes we’re going through, there’s new people, obviously new teammates, we’ve got a new logo, new paint on the wall. There’s just a lot of new going around, and I think a lot of positive thoughts and directions that we’re going. Now, if they actually work, I don’t know — we’re about to find out here pretty quickly — but I think just with everything going on, it’s just got me fired up to go this year.

“Even personally, I feel I have a lot to prove this year with Kevin [Harvick] leaving and Aric [Almirola] leaving, I’m now the longest-tenured guy there, and I need to prove my worth to the company. I just feel like I’ve got a lot of pressure on myself this year and I always love racing with pressure. I’m looking forward to it.”

Briscoe feels his status within the organization has given him a chance to find his voice.

“I just feel more comfortable in speaking my mind and bringing up concerns,” he said. “Where in the past I probably would just keep it to myself sometimes because I felt like I wasn’t really the guy to be bringing up stuff, with Kevin and Aric there and how long they’ve been there. But now, being the longest-tenured guy there, I definitely feel like I need to speak up more when I feel something. So, I’ve been trying to do that a little bit more, and the confidence that comes along with that is different.”

Briscoe is the only active Stewart-Haas Racing driver who has won in the Cup Series. Something to watch for this year will be how he can help the team’s collective success by working more as one team with four drivers instead of four separate teams.

Chase Briscoe’s path to the 2024 Chili Bowl Nationals main event becomes clear

Chase Briscoe’s path to the main event at the 2024 Chili Bowl Nationals became clear on Monday night. Find out more about Briscoe’s status!

[autotag]Chase Briscoe[/autotag] is one of the most notable drivers to compete in the 2024 Chili Bowl Nationals, joined by fellow NASCAR driver Kyle Larson. On Monday night, Briscoe competed in his preliminary event and cleared a path to make the A-main. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver came from 12th to fourth place, which makes his situation clear.

Briscoe didn’t lock into the A-main but secured a spot in one of the two B-mains. In the event, Briscoe must finish in the top 7 spots if he wants to compete in the 55-lap main event. If not, the driver of the No. 14 Cup car won’t advance on Saturday night. This situation is good for Briscoe, who won’t have to go far in the “Alphabet Soup” on Saturday.

To this point, Briscoe has only made the A-main once in 2017 but flipped for a 22nd-place finish. The 29-year-old driver has been on the record saying that the Chili Bowl Nationals is one of the “hardest races in the world to make.” Briscoe will need a good run on Saturday night if he wants to accomplish this goal for the second time.

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