
On June 4, 2012, NASCAR driver Kurt Busch was suspended after the race weekend at Dover Motor Speedway.
But why?
Busch hadn't intentionally wrecked a fellow competitor — not that weekend, at least. He hadn't intentionally spun to bring out a caution, nor had he punched a fellow driver on pit road after a race.
No, Busch, the 2004 NASCAR Cup Series champion, was placed on probation after he berated reporter Bob Pockrass, who asked Busch if his probation — earned after an on-track altercation with Newman at Darlington earlier in the season — had impacted his aggression at Dover.
"It refrains me from not beating the s--- out of you right now because you ask me stupid questions," Busch told Pockrass. "But because I'm on probation I suppose that's improper to say as well."
Yes, the Kurt Busch of old was certainly a hothead. That run-in with Pockrass was far from the first time he sparred with the media that follows the NASCAR circuit for nine months out of the year. But it's quite the comparison to the Busch that will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Friday.
Now 47, the Las Vegas native has mellowed in the decade-plus since that 2012 season, which ended up being the worst of his Cup Series career.
The 34-time Cup Series winner was forced into an early retirement in 2022 when, after a crash in qualifying at Pocono Raceway, concussion symptoms forced him out of the car and eventually led to his official retirement from racing in 2023.
The modern Kurt Busch is a more mature, subdued individual — but it's his character arc on and off the racetrack that makes him worthy of the blue jacket presented to every NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee.
Legendary team owner Jack Roush was the first to see a budding superstar in Busch back in 2000, when he put him in a Roush Racing Truck Series entry and watched Busch win four races and finish second in the championship.
That led to Busch getting the call-up to the Cup Series in 2001.
"We know that we have something special with Kurt Busch," Roush said in September 2000.
It's safe to say the "Cat in the Hat" — as Roush is affectionately dubbed — was right.
Busch's first Cup win came in his sophomore season in 2002. Three more and a third-place championship finish followed. In 2004, the first year of NASCAR's Chase format, Busch won the Cup Series title.
The rest of Busch's career saw him frequently on the move. He left Roush after 2005 to join Team Penske, then went to Phoenix Racing in 2012, Furniture Row Racing in 2013, Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014, Chip Ganassi Racing in 2019 and finished his career with 23XI Racing in 2022.
The common denominator for Busch at all of those stops? He made each and every one of those organizations better. He won with Penske, Stewart-Haas, Ganassi and 23XI and even took Furniture Row to the Chase in 2013.
Busch was an incredible talent on the racetrack and slowly but surely began to change into a better individual off it. His outbursts became fewer, his demeanor more refined as the years wore on.
And while it's what he did behind the wheel of a race car that got him to Friday's stage, it's his evolution off the racetrack that is truly a Hall of Fame-worthy story.
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