Kyle Busch analyzes Daytona accident but has no timetable for return to racing
April 15, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
A
split second before his No. 54 Toyota slammed nose-first into a
concrete wall inside Turn 1 at Daytona International Speedway, Kyle
Busch recalls saying to himself, “Oh, no, it’s not slowing down, it’s
not slowing down—this is going to hurt, this is going to hurt.”
That was an understatement.
Busch
has been sidelined with a broken right leg and broken left foot since
his crash Feb. 21 in the Alert Today Florida 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series
race at Daytona. On Wednesday at Joe Gibbs Racing's headquarters in
Huntersville, North Carolina, Busch met with reporters for the first
time since the accident and gave a fascinating, detailed account of the
wreck and his thought processes during the seconds before he hit the
wall.
“I
left the racing surface at 176 miles an hour, and I hit the wall at
90,” Busch said. “So the impact was 90 miles an hour, and it was 90 Gs.
Obviously, that was a huge hit.”
The
impact knocked the air out of Busch’s body in a sudden rush. The sharp
pain in his right leg told him immediately it was broken. His left foot,
which had remained on the brake pedal, was fractured in the center.
His
helmet hit the steering wheel, leaving a mark. His body strained
against the harness holding him in place, and as the impact knocked the
engine and front suspension back into the driver’s compartment, his
chest also collided with the wheel.
Nevertheless,
by pushing off his left heel, Busch was able to get to the door of the
mangled car and slide his torso out, in a position where safety workers
could help him to the ground.
Busch
recently visited the NASCAR research-and-development center in Concord,
North Carolina, to look over the wrecked car, and the experience gave
him a deeper appreciation of the strides NASCAR has made in the realm of
safety.
“That
was when I got a good chance to see what it looked like and to see how
much safety innovations NASCAR has come up with over the years to keep
me here today,” Busch said.
“I’m
alive today just because of the fact, I think, that the restraints
worked, the seats worked, the HANS device worked—everything worked ... I
can’t say enough about NASCAR’s innovations. From the knees up—nothing.
Not a mark on me. Not a bruise, not a headache, not a neck ache,
nothing. It was all great.”
Busch
took responsibility for starting the wreck, saying he was trying to
push teammate Erik Jones. When Jones moved up toward the center of the
track, contact from Busch’s car turned his Camry.
“I got greedy, trying to win the race,” Busch explained.
But
Busch had no answer for one important question. He simply doesn’t know
yet when he will get clearance from his doctors to return to the track.
“They
say my recovery is going faster than they expected,” Busch said. But
yet—I’ve even asked—they won’t release me a timetable. I’m not lying to
you. They’re like, ‘OK, now you’re released to stand up in both boots.
Now you’re released to walk. Now you’re released to walk without a boot
on your right (foot).
“It’s
week to week, and it’s what I can show them and what I can do and what
my physical therapist says that I’m capable of. As far as a timetable,
it’s still not set yet for me to get back, but as long as my strength
continues to improve, and I can continue to show the doctors and the
NASCAR folks that I’m able to do the things necessary to get back in the
race car, that time will be determined as I get better.”
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