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Kasey Kahne

American racing driver (born 1980)

Kasey Kahne

American racing driver (born 1980)

FieldValue
nameKasey Kahne
imageKasey Kahne 2017 Camping World 500 (cropped).jpg
captionKahne at Phoenix International Raceway in 2017
birth_nameKasey Kenneth Kahne
birth_date
birth_placeEnumclaw, Washington, U.S.
height
weight145 lb
achievements2000 USAC National Midget Series champion
2006, 2008, 2012 Coca-Cola 600 winner
Sprint All-Star Race XXIV winner
2010 Gatorade Duel winner
2017 Brickyard 400 winner
Has won with four separate engine manufacturers in NASCAR (Toyota, Chevy, Dodge),Ford
awards2004 Nextel Cup Series Rookie of the Year
Named one of NASCAR's 75 Greatest Drivers (2023)
Total_Cup_Races529
Years_In_Cup15
Prev_Cup_Pos30th
Prev_Cup_Year2018
Best_Cup_Pos4th (2012)
First_Cup_Race2004 Daytona 500 (Daytona)
Last_Cup_Race2018 Bojangles' Southern 500 (Darlington)
First_Cup_Win2005 Chevy American Revolution 400 (Richmond)
Last_Cup_Win2017 Brickyard 400 (Indianapolis)
Cup_Wins18
Cup_Top_Tens176
Cup_Poles27
Total_Busch_Races216
Years_In_Busch17
Prev_Busch_Pos56th
Prev_Busch_Year2025
Best_Busch_Pos7th (2003)
First_Busch_Race2002 1-866RBCTerm.com 200 (Rockingham)
Last_Busch_Race2025 North Carolina Education Lottery 250 (Rockingham)
First_Busch_Win2003 Ford 300 (Homestead)
Last_Busch_Win2014 Subway Firecracker 250 (Daytona)
Busch_Wins8
Busch_Top_Tens87
Busch_Poles9
Total_Truck_Races6
Years_In_Truck5
Prev_Truck_Pos84th
Prev_Truck_Year2015
Best_Truck_Pos47th (2004)
First_Truck_Race2004 Darlington 200 (Darlington)
Last_Truck_Race2015 North Carolina Education Lottery 200 (Charlotte)
First_Truck_Win2004 Darlington 200 (Darlington)
Last_Truck_Win2015 North Carolina Education Lottery 200 (Charlotte)
Truck_Wins5
Truck_Top_Tens6
Truck_Poles1
Total_ARCA_Races1
Years_In_ARCA1
Best_ARCA_Pos127th (2002)
First_ARCA_Race2002 Food World 300 (Talladega)
ARCA_Wins0
ARCA_Top_Tens0
ARCA_Poles0
Total_ARCA_East_Races1
Years_In_ARCA_East1
Best_ARCA_East_Pos51st (2008)
First_ARCA_East_Race2008 U.S. Cellular 200 presented by Wellmark (Iowa)
ARCA_East_Wins0
ARCA_East_Top_Tens1
ARCA_East_Poles0
updatedNovember 1, 2025

2006, 2008, 2012 Coca-Cola 600 winner Sprint All-Star Race XXIV winner 2010 Gatorade Duel winner 2017 Brickyard 400 winner Has won with four separate engine manufacturers in NASCAR (Toyota, Chevy, Dodge),Ford Named one of NASCAR's 75 Greatest Drivers (2023) Kasey Kenneth Kahne (; born April 10, 1980) is an American professional dirt track racing and stock car racing driver. He last competed part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 33 Chevrolet Camaro SS for Richard Childress Racing. Currently, Kahne competes in High Limit Racing, driving the No. 9 sprint car for his own team, Kasey Kahne Racing.

Off the track, Kahne is active in charitable work and is a member of the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation. He also owns his own race team, Kasey Kahne Racing, which competes in the World of Outlaws and High Limit Racing series, fielding two sprint cars for himself and Brad Sweet. Kahne is a two-time Skagit Speedway winner of the Annual Jim Raper memorial Dirt Cup (2002 and 2003) and currently holds the fastest lap record there. Kahne scored 18 career wins in the Cup Series, including 3 Coca-Cola 600s in 2006, 2008, and 2012, and the Brickyard 400 in 2017. He was also the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series Rookie of the Year in 2004. He retired from racing before the end of the 2018 Cup Series season for health reasons and was replaced at Leavine Family Racing by Regan Smith.

Racing career

Beginnings

Kahne began racing open-wheel sprint cars at Deming Speedway at seventeen in Deming, Washington, before moving up to Skagit Speedway in Alger, Washington, and then he moved to USAC. In 2000, Kahne made a trip to Pennsylvania where he won the season opener at the historic Williams Grove Speedway. He was hired by Steve Lewis, who had also employed future NASCAR drivers Jeff Gordon, Jason Leffler, Tony Stewart and Kenny Irwin Jr. In his first year on the circuit, he was named Rookie of the Year, as well as winning the national midget championship. He continued to run USAC, as well as the Toyota Atlantic Series and the World of Outlaws.

Xfinity and Camping World Truck Series

In 2002, Kahne made 20 starts in the Busch Series driving the No. 98 Channellock Ford Taurus for Robert Yates Racing. His best finish was a tenth place finish at Cabela's 250. A year later, he moved to the No. 38 Great Clips Ford for Akins Motorsports full-time. He won his first pole at Michigan International Speedway and his first Busch Series race at the Ford 300. Kahne finished seventh in the points standings. With his move to full-time competition in the Cup Series in 2004, he also drove 30 races for Akins in the Busch Series, finishing 13th in points. In 2005, he made 22 starts in the Busch Series, splitting time with Akins and Evernham's new No. 6 team. He won the O'Reilly 300 at Texas Motor Speedway and the United Way 300 at Kansas Speedway.

On May 26, 2007, Kahne won the Busch Series' Carquest Auto Parts 300 race at Lowe's Motor Speedway for his first win of 2007. On August 24, 2007, Kahne won the pole for the Cup Series' Sharpie 500 at Bristol, his second pole of the 2007 Nextel Cup Series season. Later that night, during the Busch Series' Food City 250, Kahne passed Ryan Newman on the top side in a three-wide pass that included Jason Leffler on the bottom. He held off the hard-charging Leffler to score his seventh career Busch win and his second of 2007.

In 2009, Kahne ran fewer events in other NASCAR series than in previous seasons, only seven (four in the Nationwide Series, three in the Whelen Modified Tour). With fewer distractions, Kahne's Sprint Cup stats slightly improved that year.

During the 2014 Nationwide season, Kahne scored an upset win at the Nationwide Series' Subway Firecracker 250, passing teammate Regan Smith on the final lap. The margin was 0.021 seconds.

On January 24, 2025, NASCAR announced that Kahne would return to the driver's seat for the Xfinity Series race at Rockingham Speedway on April 19.

Kahne has six career starts in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, winning five of them; his lone non-victory is a second-place run at Pocono Raceway in 2010. In 2004, he made a pair of starts in the series at Darlington Raceway and Homestead-Miami Speedway, driving the No. 2 Team ASE Racing Dodge Ram for Ultra Motorsports, winning both races. At the 2015 Charlotte Truck race, he held off Erik Jones for the win by .005 seconds, the second-closest margin in Truck Series history.

Cup Series

Kahne replaced Bill Elliott in the No. 9 Dodge for Evernham Motorsports at the end of the 2003 season when Elliott announced a part-time schedule starting with the 2004 season. Since Kahne was still under contract with Ford, the manufacturer filed a lawsuit against him after he joined Evernham Motorsports. U.S. District Judge Robert Cleland ruled in favor of Kahne, citing a clause in his contract with Ford that stipulated that the manufacturer had to provide Kahne with a full-time ride on a Ford team that both parties mutually agreed upon. That clause also stipulated that if an agreement could not be reached by either party, then Kahne could seek a ride with a different manufacturer, without breaking the terms of his contract with Ford.

Evernham Motorsports (2004–2007)

Kahne's 2004 No. 9 Dodge

In 2004, Kahne surprised many by nearly winning several races (including five 2nd-place finishes and 13 Top 5's), winning four poles, and capturing the Raybestos Rookie of the Year Award. He narrowly missed the Chase for the Nextel Cup after Jeremy Mayfield, his teammate, claimed the final spot.

In 2005, Kahne scored his first career Nextel Cup victory in his sophomore season 2005, after a dominating performance in the Chevy American Revolution 400 at Richmond International Raceway. It was also the first win for the Dodge Charger, which returned to NASCAR that year. It was the first time a Dodge won a race at Richmond International Raceway since Richard Petty did so in 1975. In addition, he became the first driver born in the 1980s to win a race in NASCAR's premier series. He also scored two poles in back-to-back weeks at Darlington and Richmond during the same year. Despite this, he was plagued with inconsistency and slumped to 23rd in the points.

On March 20, 2006, Kahne won the rain-delayed Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Nearly three weeks later, he won the Samsung/Radio Shack 500 at Texas. After that, he won four more races – a season sweep at Lowe's Motor Speedway in the Coca-Cola 600 and in the Bank of America 500 holding off Jimmie Johnson (who finished second in both races) and victories at California and Michigan.

On September 9, 2006, Kahne successfully raced his way into the Chase for The Cup after finishing third in Richmond. He was the tenth and last qualifier to make the Chase. He edged defending Nextel Cup Champion Tony Stewart out by sixteen points, but a disappointing sixteenth-place finish at New Hampshire, a crash at Dover, and running out of gas at Kansas ended his hopes for his first championship title. Kahne finished strong with five top-tens in the remaining seven races, including winning the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

On November 27, 2006, Kahne was honored by being invited to raise the traditional 12th Man flag prior to the Seattle Seahawks Monday Night Football game against the Green Bay Packers at Qwest Field in Seattle. The ceremony has been ongoing since 2003, and involves a different Seattle-area sports hero and/or beloved member of the community kicking things off before every Seahawks home game. The Seahawks beat the Packers 34–24.

During the qualifying for the 2007 Daytona 500, officials found holes in the wheel wells of his Dodge Charger. A crew member said it was just tape that had fallen off a hole in the tire. Officials said that the tape had been cut. He was one of the four drivers among Matt Kenseth and his two teammates, Scott Riggs and Elliott Sadler, whose cars had been found with aerodynamic-improving modifications. His team was one of the six teams found with illegal modifications in the Daytona festivities.

At the Sharpie 500, a day after winning the pole and the Busch race, Kahne dominated most of the race, leading 305 out of 500 laps and finishing second to Carl Edwards. This was his best finish of the 2007 season. After a disappointing 2007 season, Kahne finished nineteenth in points with zero wins, one top-five, eight top-tens, and an average finish of 22.2.

Gillette Evernham Motorsports and Richard Petty Motorsports (2008–2010)

With the new sponsor Budweiser, Kahne started off the 2008 season strong by finishing in the top-ten in both the Budweiser Shootout and the Gatorade Duel. As a result of a fourth place finish in the duel, Kahne started tenth in the 50th Daytona 500 on February 17, 2008. He finished seventh behind teammate Elliott Sadler in the 2008 Daytona 500; this was a repeat of the 2007 race, where they both also finished sixth and seventh, respectively.

In the early laps of the Auto Club 500, Kahne worked his way from twentieth to fourteenth, but brushed the wall on lap 7. However, he was able to finish ninth after the race went under a long rain delay. Kahne had to start in the back due to an engine change in the UAW-Dodge 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, but he did go on to finish sixth.

On May 17, 2008, Kahne was voted into the Sprint All-Star Race XXIV by his fans via cell phone text messaging and online voting. After making a required "stop-and-go" pit stop, Kahne began the fourth segment second on old tires. He went on to win the race and earn $1,012,975. Kahne became the first driver to win the race from the fan vote and the third driver to race in the Sprint Showdown and go on to win the All-Star race.

On May 25, 2008, he won his second Coca-Cola 600 passing Tony Stewart with two laps to go, as Stewart had a flat tire going into turn 1. This was Kahne's first points-paying win of the season. He also became the sixth driver to win the 600 and the Sprint All-Star Race in the same season.

On June 6, 2008, Kahne won the Pocono 500 from the pole despite being 38th at one point during the race after a miscue in the pits. On June 20, 2008, he won another pole for the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway, his second pole in three races. However, after handling issues early in the race, Kahne fell victim to pit road, went a lap down, and finished 33rd.

Following two consecutive 40th-place finishes (a Bristol Motor Speedway wreck caused by miscommunications between Casey Mears and his spotter, and an engine failure at Michigan International Speedway), Kahne found himself sitting outside of the Top 12, out of contention for the Chase. At the start of the last regular season race, at Richmond International Raceway, he, David Ragan, and Clint Bowyer were vying for that 12th spot. Unfortunately for him, Kahne was not able to make up enough points to put him into the Chase for the Sprint Cup. He missed the 2008 Chase by 69 points and ended the season finishing 14th.

Kahne's new team for 2009, Richard Petty Motorsports, was the result of a merger between his team's previous incarnation, Gillett Evernham Motorsports, and Petty Enterprises. The year started off inconsistently for Kahne, with early top-ten finishes at Atlanta and Bristol. Kahne won the Toyota/Save Mart 350 event on June 21, 2009, for his first road course win.

After a hot summer streak that saw three top-tens in a row, Kahne climbed into Chase contention. During the Pep Boys Auto 500 on September 6, 2009, Kahne made a late race pass and held off Kevin Harvick for his second win of the season. Following the first 26 races of the season, Kahne was in the top-twelve in points, earning him a place in the Chase for the Championship. He was seeded fourth in points. After suffering an engine failure at New Hampshire and a crash in California, Kahne struggled to get back into contention for the championship and finished 10th in the final season standings, despite finishing second in the AMP Energy 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

On September 10, 2009, it was announced that Richard Petty Motorsports would merge with Yates Racing. Kahne would remain as one of four drivers of RPM alongside his current teammates Sadler and Allmendinger, as well as Yates Racing driver Paul Menard. The team changed manufacturers to Ford and received Roush-Yates engines and other equipment from Roush Fenway Racing.

Driving the new Ford Fusion car, Kahne won the Gatorade Duel No. 2 at Daytona International Speedway on February 11, 2010. He also finished in second position in the 2010 Budweiser Shootout. Kahne ended up 30th in the Daytona 500 after being wrecked late in the race. He had been running up front for most of the race and had the fastest lap of the race. Kahne had a strong car at the Auto Club 500; however, he spun late in turn 4.

Kahne had a good run at Atlanta a few weeks later where he led the most laps in the race, and finished inside the top-five. During the following couple of months, Kahne would be unable to compete for race wins as mistakes and wrecks put a dent into the team's Chase hopes.

During the Gillette Fusion ProGlide 500 at Pocono Raceway he had a top-five car all race long, but due to a late race caution, some teams stayed out on track instead of joining the leaders on pit-road. This put Kahne in the back end of the Top 20, and during the green-white-checkered finish, Kahne tried to make it three-wide while battling for tenth place. However, he was blocked and ran down into the wet grass by his teammate A. J. Allmendinger. Kahne spun back into the racing surface and was hit by Greg Biffle and Mark Martin. The No. 9 car took off and landed on top of the outside wall, hit a tree behind the wall, and spun back onto the track on all four wheels. Kahne and Biffle both put the blame on Allmendinger for causing the huge crash.

Kahne rebounded from the disappointment at Pocono by leading laps in the following race at Michigan and finishing second, behind the dominant Denny Hamlin. He also qualified on pole for the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway the following week; and converted the pole position into a solid fourth-place finish, after bouncing back from a poor first stint, to post back-to-back top-five finishes.

In qualifying for the 2010 Carfax 400 at Michigan International Speedway, Kahne earned his second pole position of the season. On October 3, 2010, Kahne started the Price Chopper 400 at Kansas Speedway from the pole position.

On October 20, 2010, Kahne was released from the remainder of his contract with Richard Petty Motorsports. The next day, it was announced that Kahne would drive for Team Red Bull for the remainder of the season as well as the full 2011 season starting with the TUMS Bring It On 500 at Martinsville Speedway.

After the 2010 season finale in Homestead, Kahne went in for knee surgery due to discomfort and pain caused by plica syndrome.https://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?slug=ap-nascar-kahne-kneesurgery , November 19, 2010.

Red Bull Racing (2011)

On April 13, 2010, Kahne announced that he would be leaving Richard Petty Motorsports at the end of the 2010 season to race in 2012 with Hendrick Motorsports, driving the No. 5. On August 10, 2010, Team Red Bull officially announced that Kahne would drive one of their cars for the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup season, a tenure that would start in the 2010 season after Kahne was released from RPM. Kahne used the number 4 for his Red Bull Toyota, an homage to the number he used in Sprint Cars. Prior to the acquisition, the No. 4 was made famous by Morgan-McClure Motorsports. Kahne won his first pole for Red Bull Racing the year prior at the 2010 season finale at Homestead driving the No. 83. On June 9, 2011, it was announced that Farmers Insurance Group would sponsor Kahne for 22 races in 2012. It was also announced that his current crew chief Kenny Francis will join him at Hendrick.

Kahne dominated the early stages of the Brickyard 400, but spun late in the race and had to settle for 18th position. He led 48 laps, a race-high.

He did not make it into the 2011 Chase for the Sprint Cup, resting at 21st in points following the cut-off race, the Wonderful Pistachios 400 at Richmond International Raceway on September 10, 2011.

On November 13, 2011, at the newly configured Phoenix International Raceway, Kahne held off Carl Edwards in the closing laps to take his first victory of the season, his first victory for Team Red Bull, and Kahne's first victory in over two years. Kahne only led the final fourteen laps of the race.

Kahne finished the 2011 season fourteenth in points.

Hendrick Motorsports (2012–2017)

In 2012, Kahne drove the No. 5 Farmers Insurance/Quaker State/HendrickCars.com Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports, consequent with Mark Martin's move to Michael Waltrip Racing. In the Budweiser Shootout, he was involved in an early accident in the first segment. His teammates Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were eliminated in crashes during the second segment. Kahne qualified and ran well in his Gatorade Duel, but in the Daytona 500 was taken out in a crash on lap 188 involving Jamie McMurray, Regan Smith, Carl Edwards, Brad Keselowski, Tony Stewart, and Aric Almirola. He finished 29th.

Kahne at [[2012 Kobalt Tools 400

Kahne announced in late March that he would compete for Turner Motorsports in the Camping World Truck Series at Rockingham Speedway in April, driving the No. 4 in the Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200. In that race, he led 47 laps and went on to win.

Kahne had a rough start to 2012, finishing no better than fourteenth in the first five races. However, he rebounded with seven straight top-ten finishes, including a win in the 2012 Coca-Cola 600 in his 300th Sprint Cup Start. This was also his first win with Hendrick Motorsports. On July 15, 2012, Kahne won the Lenox Industrial Tools 301 at Loudon, and along with teammate Jeff Gordon made the Chase through the two Wild Card spots. During the Chase, Kahne won poles at Talladega and Kansas. He ended the season a career-best fourth place in the points, with two wins, four poles, twelve top-fives, and nineteen top-tens.

Kahne had a slow start to 2013, finishing 36th and nineteenth at Daytona and Phoenix, respectively. However, at Las Vegas, he led 114 laps (which was almost twice the number of laps he had led in all of his previous Vegas starts) and finished second to Matt Kenseth despite an impressive charge in the last laps. Kahne was able to redeem himself for this near-miss the following week by winning at Bristol. After Bristol, he had a strong run at Auto Club Speedway in which he finished ninth—he then had an even stronger run at Martinsville, where he had one of the best cars and finished fourth. He then finished 11th at Texas. At Kansas, Kahne again finished second to Kenseth in a finish very similar to the finish at Las Vegas.

Kahne's season also started with a number of run-ins with Kyle Busch, who wrecked him in three of the first eleven races: at the Daytona 500, Kahne was running in the top-five when Busch turned him approaching turn 1 on lap 33, resulting in a seven-car wreck also collecting Tony Stewart, Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray, and other cars. At Talladega, on lap 43, Kahne was in the outside lane when Busch turned him into the wall again heading towards turn 1. Kahne bounced off the wall and back into Busch and collected an additional fourteen cars, including Kevin Harvick, David Reutimann, Brian Vickers, Tony Stewart, Marcos Ambrose, Greg Biffle, Jeff Burton, Casey Mears, Jamie McMurray, Jeff Gordon, Kurt Busch, David Stremme, and Scott Speed. Later, at Darlington, another incident happened when Busch sent Kahne into the wall while being challenged for the lead late in the race, causing a caution. At the Coca-Cola 600, Kahne had influenza and there was doubt he could finish the race. This didn't stop him from leading the most laps and nearly winning the race, but Kevin Harvick got by him on a restart with eleven laps to go. At Michigan, Kahne led the race, but slid into the turn 2 wall, and the car caught fire. Kahne finished 38th and dropped down four spots in the points standings to twelfth.

Following the retirement at Michigan, Kahne rebounded with a sixth-place finish at Sonoma and an eleventh place finish at Kentucky. At Daytona, Kahne was running behind Jimmie Johnson for most of the race until he got tagged by Marcos Ambrose on a late restart, sending him into the inside wall on the back straightaway and relegating him to a 32nd-place finish. This was followed by an eleventh place finish at New Hampshire and a third place finish at Indianapolis.

At Pocono in August, Kahne started eighteenth. He led 66 laps of the race and was involved in a tight battle with Tony Stewart for the lead in the final laps. A decision by Gordon to take the final restart on lap 158 on the inside lane gave Kahne the opportunity to draft past Gordon in turn 1 and then sail away to his second career Pocono race victory and second win of the 2013 season, bringing him up to eighth place in the points. His form didn't carry to Watkins Glen, though, where he was wrecked by Matt Kenseth on a late restart that saw him collide with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and finish 34th. Kahne then had a seventh place finish at Michigan, and then a runner-up finish at Bristol behind Kenseth for the third time in 2013.

He qualified for the Chase, but any chance of him winning ended with a crash at Loudon. Early in the 2013 Sylvania 300, Kahne got loose, wheel-hopped, and hit a barrier extremely hard. Kahne was uninjured but caused controversy when he acted like he could not hear a reporter in his interview, which led many to speculate that Kahne suffered a head injury. Kahne apologized for causing the false alarm and said he was too angry to talk about it and that he was not injured. He later revealed on a February 2025 episode of The Dale Jr. Download that he had suffered a concussion.

Kahne struggled in the first half of the 2014 season. He came close to a win at Pocono in June but hit the outside barrier late in the event, costing him his shot at the win. Kahne said that Kyle Busch was yet again responsible for the crash, and Busch himself took responsibility that night. When Kahne heard that Busch apologized for the wreck, he shrugged it off and said, "I don't care to talk to him anymore about our wrecks. Tired of his aggressiveness and the fact that his performances are affecting my own results."

Kahne began ending rumors of his departure from Hendrick Motorsports with a sponsorship extension with Farmers Insurance for twelve races in the 2015–2017 seasons. At the Brickyard 400, Kahne led seventy laps due to great track position but lost the lead on a restart with seventeen laps left to Jeff Gordon and ended up sixth.

At Atlanta, Kahne controlled the final fifteen laps of the race. With three laps to go, it seemed like he lost it when a caution came out. He lost four spots on pit road, but after two more cautions, sped by Matt Kenseth and won the race to clench a spot in the Chase. It was his first and only win of 2014. He finished fifteenth in the standings, being eliminated from round two of the Chase. Kahne received a three-year contract extension with HMS in November, which would run until the conclusion of the 2018 season. It was announced a day earlier that long-time engineer and Jamie McMurray's 2014 crew chief, Keith Rodden, would return to HMS and replace Kenny Francis as Kahne's crew chief. Francis had been Kahne's crew chief since the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Replacing Francis ended the second-longest driver/crew chief pairing in NASCAR in the first two decades of the 21st century.

Kahne made his return to the Camping World Truck Series driving the No. 00 Haas Automation Silverado for JR Motorsports at Charlotte. Kahne beat 18-year-old Erik Jones by 0.005 seconds, which was tied for the second closest finish in NASCAR Truck Series competition. The win was Chevrolet's 200th win in the Camping World Truck Series. In the Cup Series, Kahne would start off with a ninth-place finish in the Daytona 500. He would struggle throughout most of the year, and would only get ten top-tens and three top-fives, his best finish being fourth at Phoenix, Dover, and the Kansas Chase race. Kahne finished the season in 18th place in the final points standings.

Kahne experienced a difficult 2016 season as he finished seventeenth in the final points standings with only three top-fives and thirteen top-tens.. During the season, Kahne did not lead a single lap in any race despite completing the most laps in the series.

Kahne's 2017 Season started off similar to previous years, but did managed to lead laps compared to the previous year. After disappointing races at the beginning of the year, things began to look up. In July 2017, Kahne returned to Victory Lane at the Brantley Gilbert Big Machine Brickyard 400, surviving a crash-laden race that took out many contending cars, including holding off Brad Keselowski on an overtime restart that ended under caution. It was Kahne's eighteenth win in the Cup Series and first in 102 races. The race was also the reason that the NASCAR sanctioning body eliminated the Overtime Line.

On August 7, 2017, Hendrick Motorsports announced Kahne would not be returning to the team for the 2018 season, and two days later, William Byron was announced as Kahne's replacement. It was simultaneously announced that the No. 5 car, Hendrick's original entry in NASCAR, would disappear from Hendrick Motorsports going forward. In 2020, the No. 5 car returned when it was assigned to Kyle Larson.

After the opening race in the chase at Chicagoland Speedway, crew chief Keith Rodden was replaced with Darian Grubb after many lackluster finishes. Right away, Kahne was one of the fastest cars at Loudon, but bad luck plagued the No. 5 team in the Playoffs, and they had an early playoff exit. At the end of the season, he ended up with a career low in top-tens with six and tied his career low of top-fives with three. He also led 41 laps in 2017, his second career lowest after the aforementioned 2016 season, where he didn't lead a lap at all. Kahne announced he would drive the 95 Leavine Family Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in 2018, replacing Michael McDowell.

Leavine Family Racing (2018)

On September 19, 2017, Kahne announced he would be driving the No. 95 for Leavine Family Racing in 2018. In the offseason, Leavine announced he would pair up with Hendrick Motorsports team engineer Travis Mack who previously substituted for Greg Ives when he crew chiefed for Dale Earnhardt Jr. to his best run in 2017. Kahne finished tenth in the All-Star race after going four laps down from a wreck. After a very disappointing first half, which included his best run of seventeenth place on three occasions, and a firing of crew chief Travis Mack for lead engineer John Leonard. He led a season high seventeen laps and scored the most points at the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona. On the final restart, Kahne tried to make a move to the lead but stalled out due to not getting help. He fell back in line and finished fourth, a season best for him, tying the team's best finish as well as moving up three spots in the standings to 25th.

On August 16, 2018, Kahne stated his intention to step away from full-time competition at the end of the year. On September 6, 2018, after heat exhaustion from the race before at Darlington, Kahne announced that he would sit out the 2018 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis and be replaced by Regan Smith, which would be the first race Kahne had not raced in since he began his full time career in the Cup Series. Following the Brickyard race, it was announced that Kahne would continue to sit out for the next three races with Smith still filling in.

On October 9, 2018, he announced on Twitter that he would sit out for the remainder of the year, ending his fifteen-year career prematurely.

Return to dirt racing

On March 29, 2019, Kahne was injured in a hard sprint car accident at Williams Grove Speedway, and Australian driver James McFadden replaced him. Kahne did not race again for over a year, with his first race back coming at Knoxville Raceway on May 8, 2020; he finished eleventh in the last chance qualifier.

On December 22, 2021, Kahne announced that he would compete full-time with the World of Outlaws in 2022, driving the Kasey Kahne Racing No. 9 car.

On December 3, 2023, Kahne announced that he would compete full-time with High Limit Racing in 2024.

Return to NASCAR

On January 24, 2025, Kahne announced he would return to the Xfinity Series for one race at Rockingham in 2025, driving the Richard Childress Racing No. 33 car with sponsorship from HendrickCars.com. His car would get damage from contact with William Sawalich and Katherine Legge, but he ended up finishing in fourteenth place (originally fifteenth before Jesse Love was disqualified).

Personal life

During most of his time in NASCAR, Kahne preferred to keep his personal life private and rarely revealed any details aside from his racing career. Although he has not married, Kahne and his former girlfriend, Samantha Sheets, became parents to a son on October 13, 2015. The couple is known to have an amicable relationship following their split sometime before 2018. Later, Kahne began dating Amy Long, a former sports reporter, in 2020. Kahne and Amy had a baby girl in early 2023.

Film and television

Kahne was featured in the premiere episode of the 2006 Biography Channel series Driven to Win. This 30-minute program covered Kahne's childhood and entry into NASCAR, as well as his 2004 Rookie of the Year season and his first win in 2005. He was also featured in two episodes of the second season of NASCAR 360 on the FX Network.

Kasey Kahne Racing, NASCAR Media Group, and Motorsports Management International partnered to produce the 2009 release, "The Rise of Kahne." This 90-minute biographical profile features interviews with Kahne, his family, and other NASCAR personalities. Footage covers the stock-car racer's open-wheel roots and successes leading up to his June 2009 win at Infineon Raceway, his first for Richard Petty Motorsports. The DVD also shows his work with the Kasey Kahne Foundation and his own sprint car race team.

Kahne's No. 9 Dodge Dealers-sponsored car appeared in the 2005 Disney film Herbie: Fully Loaded, with Kahne as one of the four drivers who boxed Herbie in and pummeled him in the final race. He is mentioned by name by one of the race announcers.

In 2010, Kahne made a brief appearance in the music video "Smoke a Little Smoke" by Eric Church.

Motorsports career results

NASCAR

(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)

Monster Energy Cup Series

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series resultsYearTeamNo.Make123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536MENCCPtsRef2004Evernham Motorsports9Dodge13th4274200523rd361120068th6173200719th3489Gillett Evernham Motorsports200814th40852009Richard Petty Motorsports10th61282010Ford20th3961Team Red Bull83Toyota2011414th10412012Hendrick Motorsports5Chevy4th2345201312th2283201415th2234201518th939201617th898201715th21982018Leavine Family Racing95Chevy30th358
DAY
41CAR
2LVS
2ATL
3DAR
13BRI
40TEX
2*MAR
21TAL
30CAL
13RCH
28CLT
12DOV
21POC
14MCH
2SON
31DAY
25CHI
36NHA
8POC
3IND
4GLN
14MCH
5BRI
21CAL
2RCH
24NHA
4DOV
42TAL
27KAN
12CLT
32*MAR
15ATL
5PHO
5DAR
5HOM
38
DAY
22CAL
40LVS
38ATL
5BRI
14MAR
2TEX
35PHO
17TAL
24DAR
3RCH
1*CLT
26DOV
35POC
27MCH
18SON
41DAY
16CHI
41NHA
6POC
27IND
2GLN
17MCH
29BRI
42CAL
6RCH
8NHA
38DOV
16TAL
13KAN
19CLT
23MAR
17ATL
35TEX
42PHO
27HOM
16
DAY
11CAL
4LVS
4ATL
1BRI
10MAR
35TEX
1PHO
6TAL
39RCH
34DAR
21CLT
1*DOV
7POC
7MCH
1SON
31DAY
25CHI
23NHA
8POC
31IND
36GLN
22MCH
4BRI
12CAL
1*RCH
3NHA
16DOV
38KAN
33TAL
2CLT
1*MAR
7ATL
38TEX
33PHO
7HOM
4*
DAY
7CAL
38LVS
35ATL
39BRI
19MAR
25TEX
20PHO
31TAL
12RCH
40DAR
20CLT
23DOV
11POC
22MCH
32SON
23NHA
25DAY
9CHI
32IND
40POC
27
GLN
26MCH
31BRI
2*CAL
10RCH
8NHA
20DOV
32KAN
9TAL
16CLT
8MAR
15ATL
9TEX
18PHO
40HOM
24
DAY
7CAL
9LVS
6ATL
28BRI
7MAR
17TEX
25PHO
36TAL
23RCH
10DAR
22CLT
1DOV
31POC
1*MCH
2SON
33NHA
30DAY
7CHI
15IND
7POC
7GLN
14MCH
40BRI
40CAL
8RCH
19NHA
11DOV
26KAN
21TAL
36CLT
2MAR
33ATL
33TEX
24PHO
13HOM
6
DAY
29CAL
12LVS
11ATL
7BRI
5MAR
19TEX
19PHO
13TAL
36RCH
29DAR
23CLT
7DOV
6POC
15MCH
21SON
1*NHA
10DAY
15CHI
3IND
7POC
5GLN
17MCH
11BRI
28ATL
1RCH
12NHA
38DOV
8KAN
6CAL
34CLT
3MAR
32TAL
2TEX
33PHO
15HOM
17
DAY
30CAL
34LVS
9ATL
4*BRI
34MAR
17PHO
39TEX
5TAL
21RCH
21DAR
20DOV
20CLT
12POC
27MCH
2SON
4NHA
36*DAY
2CHI
6IND
13POC
19GLN
17MCH
14BRI
5ATL
32RCH
29NHA
14DOV
28KAN
37CAL
4CLT
38
MAR
14TAL
26TEX
13PHO
30HOM
6
DAY
25PHO
6LVS
14BRI
9CAL
9MAR
39TEX
21TAL
37RCH
3DAR
4*DOV
36CLT
22KAN
14POC
12MCH
28SON
20DAY
4KEN
13NHA
6IND
18*POC
28GLN
26MCH
7BRI
11ATL
34RCH
38CHI
12NHA
15DOV
4KAN
2CLT
4TAL
6MAR
25TEX
3PHO
1HOM
7
DAY
29PHO
34LVS
19BRI
37CAL
14MAR
38TEX
7KAN
8RCH
5TAL
4DAR
8CLT
1DOV
9POC
29MCH
33SON
14KEN
2DAY
7NHA
1IND
12POC
2GLN
13MCH
3BRI
9ATL
23RCH
12CHI
3NHA
5DOV
15TAL
12CLT
8KAN
4MAR
3TEX
25PHO
4HOM
21
DAY
36PHO
19LVS
2*BRI
1CAL
9MAR
4TEX
11KAN
2RCH
21TAL
42DAR
17CLT
2*DOV
23POC
36MCH
38SON
6KEN
11DAY
32NHA
11IND
3POC
1*GLN
34MCH
7BRI
2ATL
36RCH
14CHI
12NHA
37DOV
13KAN
15CLT
2*TAL
36MAR
27TEX
5PHO
2HOM
13
DAY
31PHO
11LVS
8BRI
8CAL
41MAR
22TEX
11DAR
37RCH
14TAL
8KAN
3CLT
14DOV
19POC
42MCH
5SON
6KEN
8DAY
27NHA
11IND
6*POC
10GLN
12MCH
16BRI
35ATL
1RCH
17CHI
13NHA
23DOV
20KAN
22CLT
10TAL
12MAR
40TEX
38PHO
21HOM
12
DAY
9ATL
14LVS
17PHO
4CAL
17MAR
11TEX
8BRI
37RCH
6TAL
34KAN
17CLT
12DOV
4POC
13MCH
15SON
8DAY
32KEN
27NHA
19IND
24POC
43GLN
42MCH
15BRI
16DAR
12RCH
18CHI
24NHA
9DOV
6CLT
43KAN
4TAL
19MAR
9TEX
20PHO
26HOM
19
DAY
13ATL
23LVS
10PHO
22CAL
28MAR
22TEX
8BRI
17RCH
4TAL
39KAN
16DOV
4CLT
22POC
6MCH
13SON
9DAY
30KEN
14NHA
25IND
18POC
15GLN
20BRI
13MCH
14DAR
7RCH
6CHI
7NHA
9DOV
12CLT
3KAN
10TAL
35MAR
11TEX
8PHO
13HOM
37
DAY
7ATL
4LVS
12PHO
20CAL
20MAR
14TEX
38BRI
20RCH
22TAL
5KAN
15CLT
35DOV
17POC
35MCH
21SON
24DAY
18KEN
38NHA
28IND
1POC
11GLN
16MCH
38BRI
24DAR
24RCH
12CHI
21NHA
35DOV
14CLT
9TAL
8KAN
15MAR
16TEX
11PHO
19HOM
33
DAY
34ATL
21LVS
19PHO
24CAL
24MAR
24TEX
17BRI
34RCH
29TAL
17DOV
17KAN
21CLT
20POC
36MCH
23SON
20CHI
27DAY
4KEN
25NHA
19POC
30GLN
21MCH
26BRI
15DAR
24INDLVSRCHROVDOVTALKANMARTEXPHOHOM
Daytona 500
YearTeamManufacturerStartFinish
2004Evernham MotorsportsDodge2741
20053722
20062711
2007287
2008Gillett Evernham Motorsports107
2009Richard Petty Motorsports1529
2010Ford430
2011Team Red BullToyota1125
2012Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet2029
2013636
2014531
2015139
20161313
2017267
2018Leavine Family RacingChevrolet2634

Xfinity Series

NASCAR Xfinity Series resultsYearTeamNo.Make1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435NXSCPtsRef2002Robert Yates Racing98Ford33rd18872003Akins Motorsports38Ford7th41042004Dodge11th3698200521st2511Evernham Motorsports6Dodge792006931st1959200727th2199Gillett Evernham Motorsports200841st12772009Braun Racing10Toyota71st5624320103855th816Turner MotorsportsChevy201138106th0130JR Motorsports7Chevy2012Turner Motorsports38Chevy111th012013JR Motorsports5Chevy100th01201485th0120158890th015201698th0120178897th012025Richard Childress Racing33Chevy56th23
DAYCAR
31LVSDARBRI
32TEX
36NSHTALCAL
18RCH
30NHANZHCLT
29DOV
20NSHKENMLWDAY
25CHI
25GTWPPRIRP
15MCH
10BRI
DNQDAR
18RCH
15DOV
19KAN
27CLT
32MEMATL
21CAR
16PHO
18HOM
21
DAY
8CAR
26LVS
11DAR
8BRI
13TEX
9TAL
37NSH
29CAL
4RCH
18GTW
31NZH
12CLT
6DOV
8NSH
25KEN
11MLW
16DAY
38CHI
28NHA
9PPR
10IRP
14MCH
2BRI
14DAR
6RCH
12DOV
4KAN
30CLT
8MEM
15ATL
7PHO
27CAR
18HOM
1
DAY
43CAR
26LVS
2DAR
11BRI
27TEX
32NSH
3TAL
38CAL
5GTW
13RCH
10NZH
16CLT
25DOV
7NSH
6KEN
17MLWDAY
6CHI
4NHA
4PPRIRPMCH
5BRI
34CAL
4RCH
9DOV
3KAN
13CLT
36MEMATL
4PHO
11DAR
11HOM
18
DAY
5CALMXCLVS
20ATL
5TEX
1DAR
34DOV
13NSHKENMLWDAY
25CHI
12MCH
27CLT
12MEM
NSH
15BRIPHO
28TAL
31CLT
41GLN
13BRI
19CAL
5RCHDOVKAN
1TEXPHO
38HOM
39
RCH
4NHA
12PPRGTWIRP
DAY
33CALMXCLVS
1ATL
2BRITEX
11NSHPHOTALRCH
40DAR
11CLT
16DOV
22NSHKENMLWDAY
35CHI
30NHAMARGTWIRPGLNMCHBRI
4CAL
1RCHDOVKAN
16CLT
43MEM
8TEX
24PHOHOM
8
DAY
41CALLVSATL
28BRI
7NSH
19TEXPHO
28MXCTAL
21RCHDARCLT
1DOV
12NSHKENMLWNHADAY
6CHI
12GTWIRPCGVGLN
MCH
31BRI
1CAL
6RCH
9DOVKAN
12CLT
17MEMTEXPHO
6HOM
25
DAY
35CALLVSATL
9BRI
2NSHTEX
21PHOMXCTALRCH
14DARCLT
16DOV
10NSHKENMLWNHADAY
6CHIGTWIRPCGVGLNMCHBRICALRCHDOVKAN
7CLT
11MEMTEXPHOHOM
DAYCALLVSBRITEXNSHPHOTALRCHDARCLTDOVNSHKENMLWNHADAY
5CHIGTWIRPIOWGLNMCHBRI
37CGVATL
11RCHDOVKANCALTEX
30PHOHOM
CLT
8MEM
DAY
9CALLVSBRI
32NSHPHOTEXTALRCHDAR
4DOV
27CLT
26NSHKENROANHADAYCHIGTWIRPIOWGLNMCHBRI
37CGVATL
19RCHDOVKANCALCLTGTWTEXPHO
HOM
38
DAY
11PHOLVSBRI
2CALTEX
11TALNSHRCHDAR
7DOVIOWBRI
19ATL
5RCHDOV
4KANCLT
28TEXPHOHOM
CLT
22CHIMCHROADAYCHI
33
KEN
4NHA
3NSHIRPIOWGLNCGV
DAY
9PHO
18LVS
10BRI
2CALTEX
3RCH
10TALDAR
18IOWCLT
17DOVMCHROAKENDAYNHA
6CHIIND
25IOWGLN
7CGVBRI
14ATL
28RCHCHIKENDOV
8CLTKANTEXPHO
5HOM
DAY
20PHOLVSBRICALTEX
8RCHTAL
3DAR
9CLT
2DOV
6IOWMCHROAKENDAYNHA
19CHIIND
26IOWGLN
18MOHBRI
8ATL
4RCHCHIKENDOVKANCLTTEXPHOHOM
DAYPHOLVSBRICALTEXDARRCHTAL
22IOWCLTDOVMCHROAKENDAY
1NHACHI
4INDIOWGLNMOHBRIATLRCHCHIKENDOVKANCLTTEXPHOHOM
DAYATLLVSPHOCALTEXBRIRCHTAL
33IOWDOV
5MCHCHIDAY
4KENNHAINDIOWGLNMOHBRIROADARRCHCHI
12KENDOVCLT
12KANTEXPHO
10HOM
CLT
3
DAY
3ATLLVSPHOCALTEXBRIRCHTALDOVCLTPOCMCHIOWDAYKENNHAINDIOWGLNMOHBRIROADARRCHCHIKENDOVCLTKANTEXPHOHOM
DAY
2ATLLVSPHOCALTEXBRIRCHTAL
15CLTDOVPOCMCHIOWDAYKENNHAINDIOWGLNMOHBRIROADARRCHCHIKENDOVCLTKANTEXPHOHOM
DAYATLCOAPHOLVSHOMMARDARBRICAR
14TALTEXCLTNSHMXCPOCATLCSCSONDOVINDIOWGLNDAYPIRGTWBRIKANROVLVSTALMARPHO

Camping World Truck Series

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series resultsYearTeamNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122232425NCWTCPtsRef2004Ultra Motorsports2Dodge47th3802010Kyle Busch Motorsports18Toyota77th175201186th012012Turner Motorsports4Chevy80th012015JR Motorsports00Chevy84th01
DAYATLMARMFDCLTDOVTEXMEMMLWKANKENGTWMCHIRPNSHBRIRCHNHALVSCALTEXMARPHODAR
1*HOM
1*
DAYATLMARNSHKANDOVCLTTEXMCHIOWGTWIRPPOC
2NSHDARBRICHIKENNHALVSMARTALTEXPHOHOM
DAYPHODAR
1*MARNSHDOVCLTKANTEXKENIOWNSHIRPPOCMCHBRIATLCHINHAKENLVSTALMARTEXHOM
DAYMARCAR
1KANCLTDOVTEXKENIOWCHIPOCMCHBRIATLIOWKENLVSTALMARTEXPHOHOM
DAYATLMARKANCLT
1DOVTEXGTWIOWKENELDPOCMCHBRIMSPCHINHALVSTALMARTEXPHOHOM

Season still in progress

Ineligible for series points

ARCA Re/Max Series

(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)

ARCA Re/Max Series resultsYearTeamNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122ARSCPtsRef2002Robert Yates Racing98Ford127th160
DAYATLNSHSLMKENCLTKANPOCMCHTOLSBOKENBLNPOCNSHISFWINDSFCHISLMTAL
14CLT

Camping World East Series

NASCAR Camping World East Series resultsYearTeamNo.Make12345678910111213NCWECPtsRef2008Dave Davis Motorsports9Dodge51st175
GREIOW
2SBOGLNNHATMPNSHADILRPMFDNHADOVSTA

Whelen Modified Tour

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour resultsYearCar ownerNo.Make12345678910111213NWMTCPtsRef2009John Holland96Chevy45th179Alan Heinke98Chevy
TMPSTASTANHA
31SPERIVSTA
BRI
28TMPNHAMARSTATMP

Superstar Racing Experience

(key) * – Most laps led. 1 – Heat 1 winner. 2 – Heat 2 winner.

Superstar Racing Experience resultsYearNo.123456SRXCPts2023923rd01
STASTA IIMMSBER
11ELDLOS

References

References

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  6. Newton, David. (September 11, 2009). "RPM taking over Yates Racing". ESPN.com.
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