68°F
weather icon Clear

Daytona 500 champ Kurt Busch becomes Cub for a day

Updated March 16, 2017 - 6:52 pm

He was explaining his run of recent good fortune last week, which Kurt Busch said began when his beloved Chicago Cubs won the 2016 World Series.

Uh-oh. He had entered Turn 1 a little hot. He corrected by applying opposite lock, as the racing drivers call it.

“It actually started when I met Ashley,” he said of then girlfriend Ashley Van Metre.

Then the Cubs won the World Series, then he married Ashley, then he won the Daytona 500.

Then, on Tuesday, he went to spring training with the Cubs at their Cactus League digs in Mesa, Arizona — not far from where his NASCAR brethren will be trading paint and possible pit road haymakers at Sunday’s Cup Series race at Phoenix International Raceway.

The Cubs gave Busch jersey No. 86, probably because pitcher John Lackey already had dibs on No. 41, Busch’s car number. In return for getting to work out with the team, Busch brought the Harley J. Earl Trophy from Daytona with him so Kyle J. Schwarber and others Cubs could pose for photos with it.

“Epic day with the @Cubs,” Busch wrote on his Twitter account. “Thank you to all the staff and players … unbelievable experience. Even met (Cubs owner) Mr. Tom Ricketts!”

In a previous post, the Las Vegas racer said he stretched muscles he didn’t know he had. He posted a photo in which he appears to be going over the batting order wearing Cubs manager Joe Maddon’s glasses, which, come to think of it, sort of look like old-time racing goggles.

NASCAR HEALTH CARE

Lost in the scuffle of Joey Logano’s TKO of Kyle Busch (stopped on cuts) on pit road at Las Vegas Motor Speedway was an early race incident in which Kevin Harvick cut a tire and crashed hard — and waited for what seemed an eternity before NASCAR’s new traveling medical team arrived to check on him.

To hear Harvick tell it, it was like waiting on “Mother, Jugs & Speed,” if you remember the old movie about independent ambulance drivers.

“The worst part was the medical response,” said the driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Ford. “It took them forever to get to the car. I thought we made that better, but obviously we haven’t.”

RILEY, (RACING) LIFE OF

Riley Herbst, the third-generation racer from Las Vegas who is driving for Joe Gibbs Racing in the ARCA series, will take a break from those duties to compete in Saturday’s NASCAR K&N Pro Series West season opener at Tucson (Arizona) Speedway.

Herbst, the son of Las Vegas desert racing legend Troy Herbst, will drive the No. 54 UFC Gym/NOS Energy Drink Toyota, one of four cars entered by Bill McAnally Racing — the same team for which he drove in 2016 and finished seventh in final points. He finished seventh at Tucson last year.

“Tucson is a great track for good racing in all three lanes,” Riley Herbst said. “I’m excited to get back there and better my results from last year.”

WHITE FLAG

Texas Motor Speedway president and P.T. Barnum clone Eddie Gossage, on the Logano vs. Busch pit road fisticuffs — and whether he will use them to promote the April 9 Cup Series race at TMS:

“You ever eaten too much ice cream and gotten a brain freeze? That’s kind of how I felt when I saw that. Sort of had a brain freeze where this is just joy overload.”

Contact Ron Kantowski at rkantowski@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0352. Follow @ronkantowski on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST