Santa Fe New Mexican

Busch has done it all in NASCAR, except win Daytona 500

- By Dan Gelston

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kyle Busch has partied in victory lane at every NASCAR track from Darlington to Dover, from Bristol to the Brickyard. Busch has even celebrated at Daytona, with a 2008 summer Cup Series victory on his resume, and trophies from races in other series or exhibition­s in his collection.

He has yet to take his traditiona­l bow as the confetti flies at the Daytona 500. He is 0 for 14.

Winning the biggest race in NASCAR is the last drop in filling a bucket list of milestones that includes two Cup championsh­ips and more than 200 NASCAR victories for one of NASCAR’s all-time greats, who is just 34.

If failing to win the Daytona 500 is gnawing at the tempestuou­s Busch, he’s not letting on.

“The whole aspect of having one item not checked is not that big of a deal,” Busch said. “It’s not going to end my career by any means.”

Maybe not, but it would put a tidy bow on a career where Busch really has not much left to prove.

Last season, Busch was agonizingl­y close to winning the “Great American Race,” finishing second in a race where he led inside of 10 laps left. He had another strong chance in 2008 until a late-race miscalcula­tion by a teammate cost him a shot at the Harley J. Earl trophy.

Busch gets another shot Sunday at winning the race that Trevor Bayne, Jamie McMurray and Derrike Cope all managed to figure out.

Busch could move past Rusty Wallace and into ninth on the Cup career wins list if he emerges from the anything-can-happen pack. Among active drivers, Busch’s 56 wins and two titles are behind only seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson (83 wins). Busch could become the first repeat Cup champion since Johnson won five straight from 2006-10.

The good times throughout his career are etched in Busch’s Hall of Fame credential­s, but the near misses at Daytona are unforgetta­ble.

In 2008, Busch’s first season at Joe Gibbs Racing after a complicate­d breakup at Hendrick Motorsport­s, a drive toward the finish with teammate Tony Stewart came down to the wire.

Running out front in the high line, Stewart held off two Penske cars over the final thrilling laps. But as Penske drivers Ryan Newman and Kurt Busch closed in on him, Stewart didn’t feel safe running alone without any allies.

At the last second, he dropped low on the track to line up in front of Busch. The JGR teams had planned on winning with teamwork, and Stewart thought he would need Busch to make it to the checkered flag.

The decision backfired in the blink of an eye. Stewart couldn’t hook up with Busch fast enough, and the two Penske cars steamrolle­d past him on the top.

“I think Tony, to want to stick together and work as teammates, took an opportunit­y to do that with me rather than jumping out and getting in front of the other two that were coming,” Busch said. “That took away his Daytona 500. I think it was his to win. But we were right there, and we were right there close and had a fast car, too.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Kyle Busch holds up his trophy in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip in Homestead, Fla. NASCAR’s season officially opens Sunday with the Daytona 500 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Kyle Busch holds up his trophy in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip in Homestead, Fla. NASCAR’s season officially opens Sunday with the Daytona 500 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

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