HomeNASCAR NewsNASCAR Drivers NewsChase Briscoe Opens Up on Playoff Clinch, Family Drama, and Netflix Docuseries...

Chase Briscoe Opens Up on Playoff Clinch, Family Drama, and Netflix Docuseries Journey—Surprise Scenes Cut

Chase Briscoe clinched the final playoff position in the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series with a dramatic and hard-fought victory at Darlington, a moment that meant so much more given the weight of the moment: this would be his last chance to reach the postseason with Stewart-Haas Racing before the iconic team closes at season’s end. The win also cemented Briscoe’s place in the heart of NASCAR’s growing audience, elevating his profile as he features prominently in the new season of Netflix’s “Full Speed” docuseries, set to debut tomorrow, giving fans a unique glimpse into his intense personal and professional journey during a turbulent year.

Briscoe’s final regular-season race win was not only a display of resilience on the “Track Too Tough to Tame,” but also a deeply emotional moment for his growing family, who watched with anticipation and nerves as he crossed the finish line, securing both a playoff berth and a lasting legacy with his outgoing team. Beyond the track, the spotlight shines brighter as cameras follow not just the roar of his No. 14 car but also the private moments and family drama that unfolded as he and his wife, Marissa, prepared to welcome twins during this period of immense transition.

For Briscoe, the 2024 Southern 500 at Darlington meant far more than a trophy or a playoff spot. With Stewart-Haas Racing shutting down, each lap was etched with finality and significance, making his playoff clinch the culmination of relentless commitment and emotional conflict. At home, he faced the looming arrival of two new family members—a deeply personal journey that, surprisingly for some, became a core part of his Netflix docuseries story.

The intensity off the racetrack paralleled the high stakes on it. Rather than shielding their personal life from the cameras as many would, Chase Briscoe and Marissa embraced the unconventional decision to let Netflix document their lives in full view, even inviting the producers into the most intimate of family milestones.

“Me and my wife talked about it and we just felt like with everything kind of going on in our life, there was no way that we would be able to film it all and especially do as good of a job as they did,”

Briscoe shared.

“So just let them film it and follow us along with the process and it would be able to live forever that way.”

Such transparency wasn’t without boundaries. With the stress and exhaustion of late pregnancy, there were days when Marissa simply couldn’t participate, but for the most part, the cameras enjoyed unprecedented access to the Briscoes’ family life. Briscoe explained,

“There was times where, truthfully, Netflix was wanting to film stuff here at the house with, for example, her just watching a race, right? But she felt so bad all the time that she just was like, ‘I don’t think I can do it today.’ But other than that, I mean, it was a wide open book. They were literally at the hospital – I don’t know, four hours after we had the twins, I would say. And I mean literally came to the house at 4:30 in the morning when we were leaving to go to the hospital. So, they definitely kinda had full access.”

This willingness to reveal vulnerable moments and embrace uncertainty made the Briscoes’ journey especially compelling for audiences. The family’s story, raw and unscripted, stands out amidst the usual bravado of professional sports.

“If we’re gonna do it, we have to let them have the full access. Otherwise it’s just not gonna be the full story. So, it was very eye-opening and it was neat to have them be a part of that whole thing.”

Most would expect that offering such intimacy at home would be contrasted by limited access to the inner workings of a Cup Series team, especially one in its final season. Yet, the opposite was true for Chase Briscoe’s No. 14 crew. Stewart-Haas Racing, already resigned to its fate, extended rare, virtually unrestricted access to the filmmakers—a transparency fueled by the knowledge that the organization had little left to hide.

“Yeah, that was one thing that I feel like is so unique about I guess just following the 14 car was from an access standpoint,”

Briscoe said, reflecting on the invitation extended to Netflix’s cameras.

“We literally could open it all up because there was nothing to hide. Like, we were shutting down at the end of the year. So, a lot of that stuff didn’t truthfully make it into the show, but there was a ton of stuff that they were a part of that they probably, I would guess weren’t a part of at other race shops just because, like I said, for us, it didn’t really matter. We didn’t have anything to hide.”

For those following Chase Briscoe’s journey, these moments provide a unique vantage point into both the personal and professional endings and beginnings that defined his 2024 season. From candid behind-the-scenes celebrations at the race shop to the electric atmosphere on the day of Briscoe’s clinching victory, the docuseries captures a convergence of victory and farewell.

“Being there that day was honestly the coolest day I’d ever experienced at Stewart-Haas Racing in my entire seven, eight years,”

Briscoe recalled emotionally.

“Just the electricity in the air there was unlike any other day I’d ever imagined. So, letting them be there on that day and get to experience that and really let the fans even see kind of behind the scenes of what that process was like was a really unique thing.”

Still, the final edit of any documentary leaves some stories untold, and Briscoe was candid about surprise omissions from the show. He recounted, with a mix of humor and disappointment,

“The two things I thought for sure were gonna make it that didn’t make it – one of them was me and my wife having this incredible discussion about minivans and how I wanted to have a minivan and she didn’t wanna have a minivan. I thought for sure that would’ve made it in because I was pretty headstrong about wanting a minivan and how cool they were.”

Another scene excluded, though light-hearted, was especially memorable to Chase Briscoe and his family.

“And the other one was actually at the hospital. Our room had like a balcony and they were filming Brooks running around all this stuff and he ran out on the balcony. And like just randomly took off running out there and I opened the door to see what he was doing, and he was literally just peeing off the balcony. And I thought for sure that would’ve made it in there, but I guess it didn’t.”

As Netflix viewers prepare for the debut of this season’s “Full Speed,” the five-part series promises to showcase both triumph and tumult. While not every family moment survived the final cut, the drama and raw humanity of Chase Briscoe’s playoff clinch, family changes, and the end of an era for Stewart-Haas Racing will undoubtedly stand out. With the first episode releasing May 7, fans and newcomers alike are faced with a multidimensional storyone that intertwines championship ambitions, farewells, new beginnings, and a willingness to be vulnerable even during the most intense and uncertain periods in a young driver’s career.

The significance of Chase Briscoe’s journey is amplified by how it mirrors the emotional landscape of sports, where victories intertwine with personal milestones, and endings arrive just as new chapters begin. The openness with which Briscoe and his family shared their experience, combined with the unparalleled access to a storied team in its twilight, could change the way fans perceive not only Chase Briscoe, but the stakes and sacrifices that define the highest levels of racing. What happens next for Briscoe is uncertain, and that unknown is both daunting and full of promise, waiting to be chronicled in new ways on and off the track as he forges ahead in a world made forever different by choices made in the glare of victory and the soft glow of family life under the documentary spotlight.

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