For Kurt Busch, winning Indy wouldn't be a bad problem
March 8, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS VEGAS — Running the Indianapolis 500/Coca-Cola 600 double, which Kurt Busch will do May 25,
is fraught with complications, not the least of which is travel between Indianapolis and Charlotte.
There’s
a tight window between the checkered flag at Indy and the green flag at
Charlotte Motor Speedway, and that window could narrow considerably
should Busch happen to win
the 500 in his first attempt.
“I’d
love to have that problem,” Busch said Saturday at Las Vegas Motor
Speedway. “The vision that I had if I had that problem, to win
Indianapolis… now keep in mind, I have
zero experience in an Indy car, and this will be the toughest
challenge, especially when they drop the green flag…
“Let’s
say it does happen. There will be the quick celebration in Victory Lane
with the Borg-Warner [Trophy], the chug of milk of course, and that big
wreath. I can’t wait
to hand that to (Andretti Autosport team owner) Michael Andretti, so he
can wear it, and he can handle all the media while I’ve got to run down
to Charlotte.”
Can
Busch win? The driver of the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series cited his own experience when answering that
question.
“I
remember my first Nationwide Series race — because I went straight from
Trucks to Cup,” Busch said. “And I didn’t do Nationwide until 2006, and I
had years on the Cup circuit
at that point. It was a whole new experience, driving those cars,
feeling the setup, the practice sequences and even how they drove in
traffic.
“At the
time I was with Penske Racing. They had their Nationwide program
scienced out pretty good. I ended up winning my first race in Nationwide
(at Texas Motor Speedway).
Maybe that’s the experience level I need to take into this Indy
adventure. Sometimes you get that young, dumb luck. Maybe we’ll bump
into that.”
NO 'WRECKLESS' DRIVING
Despite
the new championship format in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, with a
heavy emphasis on race wins, Richard Petty Motorsports driver Aric
Almirola has reservations about
taking a checkers-or-wreckers approach to the 2014 season.
Though a
win all but guarantees a place in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup,
there’s still a possibility that a driver can qualify on points.
“If you
win a race, you pretty much know you’ll be in the Chase, but at the
same time you have to think about points,” Almirola said. “I want to win
a race. That’s our number-one
objective, but if we don’t and we’re the first or second guy in points
that hasn’t won a race, you’re going be in the Chase. We can’t lose
sight of that.
“We
can’t just throw caution to the wind and either win or wreck every week.
We have to be conscious about the points and be able to make the Chase,
even if we don’t win a
race. We fully anticipate to win a race, and I think we’re certainly
capable of that, but we need to maximize how many points we get every
weekend as well.”
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