The Arizona Republic

Busch brothers back racing at Daytona after missing ’15

- DAN GELSTON ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - Kyle Busch was stuck in a hospital bed, the Daytona 500 just a race on TV.

Busch smiled for a photo with his dog and wife. He tweeted his support for Joe Gibbs Racing.

He was more hopeful of a comeback from broken bones than a championsh­ip.

Just a few blocks away a day earlier at NASCAR headquarte­rs, Kurt Busch faced a final appeals panel, trying to get a suspension overturned for his role in a domestic dispute with his ex-girlfriend. He climbed into a waiting SUV that sped off, squealing its tires. Busch did not watch the Daytona 500.

Both Busch brothers were out of “The Great American Race” for the first time since 2000.

Fast forward a year, and Kurt Busch’s hiatus was a bump in what would become his best season in years. He won two races and earned a spot in NASCAR’s playoffs. He tweeted a photo Friday night with his fiance having a blast at a private party hosted by Jeff Gordon. And Kyle? “Champ! Champ!” The 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup champion hears the yells from fans everywhere he goes at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

“I’m nowhere near Junior’s (Dale Earnhardt Jr’s) level, which is good,” Busch said. “It’s definitely not a bad thing.”

It sure beats where he was this time last year.

The brothers are back, each a Cup champ and among the small group of favorites Sunday in the season opener.

Kyle will slide in the No. 18 Toyota on Sunday, a year after he crashed into a concrete wall the day before the Daytona 500 and broke his right leg and left foot.

He’s still in championsh­ip form, winning a qualifying race during Speedweeks.

“I don’t necessaril­y feel any redemption,” Busch said. “I think if I could end up in victory lane on Sunday, then I certainly think it would kind of come full circle, essentiall­y. I’d love to have that happen, but I’m not expecting anything from the racetrack or the racing gods to make that happen.”

Busch withstood multiple surgeries, went through a grueling rehabilita­tion program and missed only 11 races. He got back in his Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in late May, and NASCAR granted him a waiver to race for the title should he earn a berth in the playoffs.

He won the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway to claim the title, and knocked Kevin Harvick from his perch as champion.

“It’s great to see both Busch brothers with a championsh­ip trophy,” Kurt said.

Kurt Busch won the title in 2004, the inaugural season of NASCAR’s Chase format. The system has been tweaked several times and starts the third year of an eliminatio­n format that sends four drivers to Homestead to race for the title. He drives the No. 41 Chevy for StewartHaa­s Racing.

Kurt congratula­ted Kyle on joining him to the Cup Club, but the brothers, who are not super close, did little celebratin­g together.

“I could tell you from times before when the championsh­ip celebratio­n is so busy, it’s hard,” Kurt said. “There was one quick moment where I was able to give him a hug, tell him how proud of him I was. The schedule just keeps you grinding and grinding and grinding.

“I was real happy for him, but there wasn’t much time.”

The Busch’s have made names for themselves through the years as much for their prickly personalit­ies as their talent in stock cars.

Known as one of most talented drivers in the sport, Kyle’s temperamen­t often got in his own way. But he has mellowed with marriage, gained perspectiv­e after the Daytona wreck, and was determined to be on his feet in the delivery room when wife Samantha gave birth to their first child, a boy born in May — right after the driver returned to the race car and celebrated his 30th birthday.

She was by his side every step of his recovery and never complained when their bedroom was made into a hospital wing.

“It was quite chaotic and I’m sure it was tough,” Kyle said, “but she’s a tough cookie as well, too. I think it made us stronger, closer together.”

He still texts with Todd McCall, the doctor who repaired his right leg.

“It means a lot to me that he keeps up with what we’re doing,” Kyle said. “And for as much as he helped me getting back on my feet.”

And back with Kurt in the Daytona 500.

Elliott captures Xfinity race

Chase Elliott won the Xfinity Series seasonopen­ing PowerShare­s QQQ 300 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Saturday, edging Joey Logano for his first victory at NASCAR’s most famous track.

Elliott took the lead from Logano on a final restart with 13 laps to go and then blocked his fellow Sprint Cup regular on the last lap. Logano got a strong run on the outside a few hundred feet from the finish line and then banged the side of Elliott’s No. 88 Chevrolet several times, but he couldn’t get past.

Elliott calmly climbed out of his car, grabbed the checkered flag and then pumped his fist a few times in the air — the kind of subdued celebratio­n outsiders have grown to expect from the son of Hall of Famer Bill Elliott.

Elliott, a rookie in the Cup series, will start the Daytona 500 on the pole Sunday.

Kahne was third, followed by Elliott Sadler and Austin Dillon.

 ?? MIKE DINOVO/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Kyle Busch won one of Thursday’s two qualifying races for Sunday’s Daytona 500.
MIKE DINOVO/USA TODAY SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Kyle Busch won one of Thursday’s two qualifying races for Sunday’s Daytona 500.

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