As 2025 winds down, Supercars.com is ranking the top 10 drivers of the 2025 Repco Supercars Championship, starting with Broc Feeney, who comes in as our #1
Beaten to the punch by Will Brown in 2024, Broc Feeney arrived in 2025 with a point to prove.
14 wins, 19 pole positions and 20 podiums later, the Red Bull Ampol Racing star signalled to everyone that, while he's in a Supercar, he won't be an easybeat for a long time.
Feeney was a revelation in 2025, particularly through the middle part of the season. He won just one of the first 10 races, then reeled off 11 of the next 15. Whatever clicked in Feeney and the #88 crew worked.
A difficult enduro period saw Feeney return in The Finals as the favourite, before Chaz Mostert and Walkinshaw Andretti United wrestled momentum away. However, he still won at Sandown and Adelaide to keep the pressure on until the very last day.
The record books will show Mostert as champion, but we won't forget Feeney's 2025 in a hurry. He was a worthy champion, and few can argue he didn't fight. Look to his last race, when he defended for his life on lap 1, before dragging a coughing Camaro home. For a driver of all of 23, Feeney has fighting spirit few drivers on the grid possess.
Broc Feeney's season stats
Championship position: 3rd
Best finish: 1st (Melbourne, Tasmania 2x, Perth 2x, Darwin 3x, Townsville 2x, Ipswich 2x, Sandown, Adelaide)
Average finish: 4.27
Race head-to-head with teammate: 23-10
Podiums: 20
Best start: 1st (Melbourne 4x, Tasmania, Perth, Darwin 3x, Townsville, Ipswich 3x, The Bend, Gold Coast, Sandown, Adelaide 3x)
Average start: 3.06
Qualifying head-to-head with teammate: 32-2
Why we picked him
Only six drivers won more races in a season than Feeney. They are Shane van Gisbergen, Scott McLaughlin, Craig Lowndes, Jamie Whincup, Mark Skaife and Garth Tander. Some are already Hall of Famers, and the others will be one day.
You talk to Feeney, who realise why he is such a good driver. He's switched on, sharp, tactful with his words, and doesn't shy away from any question. If a question is curly, he'll tackle it head it, and put the pressure back on his rivals.
Feeney is box office, a driver who goes head first into any situation with a cheeky grin. He will be one of the faces of Supercars for the next decade at an absolute minimum, and in that period, who knows how many championships he could rack up?
A phenomenal driver, and a brilliant season. Yes, he didn't get the biggest trophies, but many know he could have had either the title or Bathurst easily had things gone his way.
What we expect next season
His rivals expect him to sweep all before him. Will Brown said "we're all screwed" if Feeney goes to another level in 2026. Feeney, meanwhile, quipped that he hopes to make it "harder" for everyone next season.
Put that all together, and his 14-win and 19-pole hauls could get knocked off. He was that locked in in 2025, and there's no reason he can't meet that level (or exceed it) in 2026.
It would be too simple to suggest the heartbreak of 2025 would have hurt his confidence. Feeney is too complete a driver (even at 23) to suffer such a dip in performance not to fight for a title in 2026.
For Feeney, anything less than a championship next season won't do. It's up to driver and team to do it all again. This time, though, do they mirror Mostert's efforts and think long term to Finals?
The views in this article do not necessarily express the opinions of Supercars, teams or drivers.