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Why a focused Kyle Busch can win the Sprint Cup Series Championship

DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 18:  Kyle Busch, driver of the #18 M&M's Brown Toyota, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway on February 18, 2012 in Daytona Beach, Florida.  (Photo by John Harrelson/Getty Images for NASCAR)

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. - By popular demand, this is the post where I set aside all of my personal disregard for Kyle Busch and hail the Las Vegas native for what he really is -- the most talented wheelman in the history of the business.

Coming off of turn 4 on Saturday night at the Budweiser Shootout, Busch was running second to defending Series champion Tony Stewart. The race was going to come down to a Daytona staple, the tri-oval slingshot.

By all accounts, Busch should have been happy - and blessed - to have even made it to the finish. Busch's car was sideways all night, a freighting combination of running 200 mph with a drastically lower spoiler and NASCAR's new restrictor plate rules package.

Lesser drivers would have, and did trash their cars all night long. Busch did what roughly 20 other drivers couldn't do. He kept his Toyota Camry off the wall and pointed towards the front.

The first near-accident happened on Lap 48 when Busch drifted in front of Jimmie Johnson, saving his car three times before correcting it back towards the pack. The second and most drastic save occurred with two laps to go when Jeff Gordon shoved Busch on his left rear bumper to ignite a nine-car crash that concluded with Gordon slamming the wall head-on and flipping three times before landing on his roof.

Busch fought the steering wheel four times, kept his nose pointed straight, and kept himself in position to duel with Tony Stewart on the green-white-checkered finish for the win.

Busch could have settled, knowing that he averted disaster on not one, but two separate occasions. But that's not how Kyle Busch operates. Instead, Busch shoved Stewart down the back stretch, past a race-leading Marcos Ambrose in attempt to win the race on the familiar two-car tandem.

It worked.

Find out how after the jump!

Star-divide

Coming down to the start-finish line, in a conclusion similar to that of Talladega last fall, Busch timed-his pull-out perfectly, worked a side-draft off Stewart's quarter-panel, broke the champion's momentum and beat him to the line by 0.013 of a second - the closest finish in Budweiser Shootout history.

Call it the mark of a champion.

Busch has all the makings of a future Sprint Cup champion but we've know that for years. What's stopped him from achieving his top priority?

Distractions for one.

Whether it's high-profile feuds with Kevin Harvick, Richard Childress or Rick Hendrick, Busch has never been able to keep his eye on the prize for a full season.

I'm of the belief that humans are only capable of a set amount of focus throughout a given period of time. Be it a day, week, month or a full Sprint Cup Season, once we pass this threshold, our results drastically deminish.

Busch, with all of his squabbling, Nationwide and Truck endeavors has just stretched himself too thin. This is especially apparently by time the Chase begins in September. Isn't it awfully peculiar that Busch has only won one Chase race and finished no higher than fifth in the Series standings?

I'm not saying that Busch is incapable of winning races late in the year but Busch at 90% just isn't enough to match a Jimmie Johnson or Tony Stewart who both ramp it up to 100% near midseason. Changes in priorities are in order for Busch, a concept that he appears open to.

In November, Busch announced that he was stepping away from the Camping World Truck Series and limiting his appearances in the Nationwide Series to fully focus on the Sprint Cup Series championship. Call it the NEW new Kyle Busch.

For far too long Busch has been worried about everyone else - the guy who just passed him, the man who just punched him, the man who just wrecked his truck. If the 2012 season is the year where Kyle Busch focuses on Kyle Busch, it will give the 26-year old his most pressing concern yet - where to place his Sprint Cup Series trophy.

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Now THIS is an article I can get behind!

Great stuff. I feel honored to be able to watch such an incredible talent week in and week out.

by Hatfield on Feb 22, 2012 5:15 PM EST reply actions   1 recs

While I fully intended to write this at some point this season, you gave me the shove I needed.

You’re absolutely right in that he’s an A-class talent and he deserves to be recognized as such.

Thanks for always reading and supporting the site, too.

Follow me on Twitter @MattWeaverSBN

Senior Writer and Editor for SBNation's NASCAR Ranting and Raving

Correspondent for SBNation's IndyCar Pop Off Valve Blog (http://www.popoffvalve.com/)

by MattWeaver on Feb 22, 2012 5:19 PM EST up reply actions  

Absolutely.

I’m sure everyone was eagerly awaiting my return upon the new racing season. Especially with the events of Saturday night.

It honestly is a well written piece, and I think it does justice to what we witnessed this past weekend. Even if I pretended to be unbiased, I would have been blown away by it.

Wheelman indeed.

by Hatfield on Feb 22, 2012 5:23 PM EST up reply actions  

A class talent ...

with a B class attitude.

But then again so was Dale Earnhardt when he started.

Founder and site manager of SBN's NASCAR Ranting & Raving (www.4ever3blog.com) - "Filling up your rearview and headed to the front."

by 4ever3 on Feb 22, 2012 6:15 PM EST up reply actions  

You could argue that by the end of his career, Earnhardt had an A-class personality that led to B-class results.

Busch should probably never drastically change. He has the winner’s edge.

Follow me on Twitter @MattWeaverSBN

Senior Writer and Editor for SBNation's NASCAR Ranting and Raving

Correspondent for SBNation's IndyCar Pop Off Valve Blog (http://www.popoffvalve.com/)

by MattWeaver on Feb 22, 2012 6:22 PM EST up reply actions  

Yeep ...

the season before he died he finished 2nd in the points. And the year before the reason he finished so bad was because he had an undiagnosed broken neck from a wreck in 1996 that progressively got worse each season. Over the Christmas break between 98 and 99 he had surgery to repair his neck and was back in the saddle again. Near the end of the season in 98 he was in so much pain after each race (and he couldn’t raise his arms higher than his shoulders nor feel his right arm when the race was over) he had to be helped out of the car. This was all done without the media being present because they didn’t want anyone to know. So yeep he had B-class results, but I’d like to see anyone, including Mr. Busch, do what Earnhardt did with a similar injury.

Founder and site manager of SBN's NASCAR Ranting & Raving (www.4ever3blog.com) - "Filling up your rearview and headed to the front."

by 4ever3 on Feb 22, 2012 8:43 PM EST up reply actions  

I wonder...

if NASCAR sitting him down for a race last year, might be the push he needs to smarten up and finally finish at the top of the heap. He’s probably the most gifted driver out there…when he gets it figured out between the ears, he will be tough to beat.

by NascarPoolsOnline on Feb 23, 2012 11:01 AM EST reply actions  

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