Orlando Sentinel

Can Kurt Busch pull off daily double in racing?

Attempting what just three other drivers have tried, he will race in the Indianapol­is 500 this afternoon, then in NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 in the evening near Charlotte, N.C.

- By George Díaz

CONCORD, N.C.— Kurt Busch has always been a bit of a prickly pear. Maybe that’s the bestway to make some sense out this fruity adventure during a looooooong stretch of Sunday.

While most folks are settling into their beach chairs and popping open a frosty beverage to chill and celebrate the Memorial Dayweekend, Busch will be completing a crazy circuit of planes, no trains and two automobile­s. It’s the infamous super double: Driving in the Indianapol­is 500 in the day, and then driving in NASCAR’s Coca- Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the evening.

The most pertinent question seems to be: “Why?” “I’m a racer,” Busch said. “This is a true test of what your commitment level is on being a racer.”

True, this is no casual love affair. Busch will attempt to drive a total of 1,100miles. Hewill have to scramble to make the NASCAR race after a 430-mile private plane flight. He will drive two completely different types of ma--

“I’m a racer. This is a true test of what your commitment level is on being a racer.”

Kurt Busch on today’s dual race attempt

chines— open-wheel and a stock car.

Busch also will likely start at the back of the pack for the NASCAR race because he is expected to miss the drivers meeting about two hours before the start of the race. He’ll be on a plane during that time, having IV fluids pumped into him to prevent dehydratio­n.

It’s easy to see why only four drivers have given this a shot: Robby Gordon, John Andretti and Tony Stewart, who now happens to be Kurt’s boss at Stewart-Haas Racing.

Hopefully, Stewart has kept notes since 2001when he combined for the best results of the bunch, finishing sixth at Indianapol­is and third at Charlotte.

“It’s going to be different because he’s never raced one,” Stewart said. “He’s with a great team, though, and he’s with great people. [Andretti Autosport owner and John’s cousin] Michael Andretti is definitely a great choice to be with. Michael, being a driver and having run the 500, his experience­s there are going to help Kurt.”

But in the end, it’s a solo ride at Indy, where Busch gets to learn on the fly at nearly 230 miles an hour.

“It hasn’t been overwhelmi­ng, but at the same time each day in the Indy car I’m a student and I’m learning,” Busch said. “How many times have we all told ourselves if I would have known now what I could have known then? Theway to approach this is to have fun. I have zero Indy Car experience and I’m trying to elevate my game over there to be competitiv­e. Yes, it’s difficult.”

At 35, Busch has the smarts and the savvy to give this a shot without any rollof-the-eyes sniping. From his days as a go-kart racer in Nevada to his progressio­n through the NASCAR ranks that includes a Cup title in 2004, Busch has become one of the best drivers on the circuit.

But he’s also one of the most mercurial ones, losing his ride with Penske Racing after the 2011 season because of his frequent contentiou­s post-race scrums with the media. But the fact that he qualified for the Chase while driving for a downsized operation in Furniture Row Racing in 2013 proves that Busch is all about talent. The tantrums only get in theway.

Busch also has earned considerab­le respect by becoming a strong ally of war veterans. Busch dedicates each race to a servicemem­ber killed in action or who suffers from PTSD.

“I really like the work he is doing with the Armed Forces, and it says a lot about what’s important to him more than anything he is doing on the race track,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said. “He’s doing some amazing work and making an impact. That’s doing a lot for him — like it matters — in my eyes. I respect him a lot more because of that.

“The racing thing … hell, we all like to race, so I can understand his enjoyment of doing the Indy deal. I can’twait towatch and pull for him. He’s representi­ng the entire sport. Whether he knows it or not, he’s got a lot of people, drivers, crew and just about everyone on the infield pulling for him to do well because he is representi­ng all of us.”

Kurt Busch, NASCAR ambassador. Who knew?

 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE); MATT SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES (BELOW) ?? Kurt Busch will be the 4th driver to compete in the Indianapol­is 500, above, and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 near Charlotte, below, on the same day.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE); MATT SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES (BELOW) Kurt Busch will be the 4th driver to compete in the Indianapol­is 500, above, and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 near Charlotte, below, on the same day.
 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? INDIANAPOL­IS 500, NOON, WFTV-9 Driver Kurt Busch practices for the Indianapol­is 500, left, and the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, right, both of which he will attempt to complete
today.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY IMAGES INDIANAPOL­IS 500, NOON, WFTV-9 Driver Kurt Busch practices for the Indianapol­is 500, left, and the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, right, both of which he will attempt to complete today.
 ??  ??
 ?? JERRY MARKLAND/GETTY IMAGES ?? COCA-COLA 600, 6 P.M., WOFL-35
JERRY MARKLAND/GETTY IMAGES COCA-COLA 600, 6 P.M., WOFL-35
 ??  ??
 ?? JONATHAN FERREY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kurt Busch will look for a win in his No. 26 Suretone Andretti Autosport Honda Dallara in today’s Indy 500.
JONATHAN FERREY/GETTY IMAGES Kurt Busch will look for a win in his No. 26 Suretone Andretti Autosport Honda Dallara in today’s Indy 500.

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