James Buescher faces big changes in step up to Nationwide Series
Jan. 11, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—James Buescher has left the nest, and the 2012 NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series champion believes success will follow
him to his new racing home.
After
three top-three Truck Series finishes in the last three years—a pair of
thirds sandwiched around his title—Buescher is leaving the
relative comfort and security of Turner Scott Motorsports, a team
founded by father-in-law Steve Turner, for a full-time NASCAR Nationwide
Series ride with RAB Racing.
"In
some ways, it was a really difficult decision from a family aspect and
everything that we've accomplished at Turner Scott
Motorsports—championships
and race wins and poles and kind of building that organization with
them," Buescher said Saturday during NNS testing at Daytona
International Speedway, site of his only career Nationwide victory
(2012).
"Leaving was definitely tough."
In
changing teams, Buescher also will have to get to know a new crew chief
(Chris Rice) and acclimate to a new manufacturer (Toyota).
Sponsor Rheem is moving with him to the No. 99 Camry owned by Robby
Benton.
"Coming
over to a new team, it's going to take some learning, and there's a lot
of unknowns," Buescher said. "We have to learn each other,
and I have to learn the cars and just the way things work and working
with a new manufacturer.
"So I have a lot of unknowns, but I feel like we'll be competitive for a championship."
Buescher recognizes, however, that he faces a distinct move up in class.
"The
competition level is definitely a step up," he said. "(In) Truck
racing, you have a couple of guys come down from the (Sprint) Cup
Series—in an average race you have one or two. And over in the
Nationwide Series, just about every week there's around 10. Obviously,
the competition goes up, and the amount of races and the length of
races, just getting used to all those different things
on a full-time basis.
"I've
raced plenty of Nationwide races in the past (58 starts in the past six
years), so I feel like I'm going to get in the swing of
things even faster than if I had only raced five or six Nationwide
races. But I'm excited to be full time in the series, and it's got its
challenges, but I feel like I'm ready to tackle them."
It
should come as no surprise that Buescher's long-term goal is ascension
to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. With that in mind, Buescher
believes the move to RAB, whose lone NNS win came at Montreal in 2010
with road-course ringer Boris Said behind the wheel, is his best career
option at this point.
"I
want to make it to the Sprint Cup level, and I want to be a Sprint Cup
champion one day," Buescher said. "I have to make the moves
in my career that are best for me, and I feel like coming over to RAB
Racing and Toyota, and being able to bring Rheem with me as the sponsor,
was the best situation for me to be in right now.
"We
had a test at Nashville back in December that went really well, and
this is my second time in the car today (Saturday), and we were
fastest in the single-car runs all morning and second fastest in the
draft. ... I'm thinking things are going to go really well, and like I
said, I'm really excited to finally be in the Nationwide Series
full-time."
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