Kurt Busch not bothered by brother’s fame

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LAS VEGAS – Few would have blamed Kurt Busch if he had skipped Victory Lane. After all, drivers who finish 23rd at their home track don’t have much to celebrate.

Yet with a heartfelt smile, he stopped by the party Sunday night to briefly congratulate his kid brother.

If he had even one twinge of jealousy, he didn’t show it.

Maybe he saved that emotion for later, for a personal moment away from all the cameras when Busch might have griped, “That should have been me.”

No one would think anything less of Busch if he’s had those thoughts in the year since his little brother suddenly emerged as NASCAR’s newest superstar and knocked him from his throne as the family’s top race car driver.

Since moving to Joe Gibbs Racing last season, Kyle Busch has wracked up win after win.

He’s cemented himself as a serious championship contender and put his career on the fast track to fame and fortune. His name was even mentioned last week as a possible candidate for a planned U.S.-based Formula One team – a nod that signifies the driver is considered one of the best in the world.

Kurt Busch, meanwhile, has been seemingly stuck in neutral.

His cars aren’t as good, his trips to Victory Lane few and far between. Kyle Busch earned 21 trips to the winner’s circle last season.

Kurt? Just one.

Still, he’s weathered the shifting spotlight with grace, and that didn’t change Sunday when a Busch finally won at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Growing up in the desert, young drivers didn’t dream about NASCAR. That was a sport for the Southeast.

Then came the glistening speedway, built on a dirt lot next to the .34-mile paved Bullring where Kurt Busch and his dad, Tom, competed. Kyle was just a fan in the stands at the time, a little boy watching his big brother race. Sometimes he’d turn away from the action to get a glimpse of the construction on LVMS, which was rapidly growing before their eyes.

Now NASCAR seemed possible. But how? Kurt Busch was a Southwest racer, and he didn’t exactly have the means to change that. Plus, his mother wanted him to go to college, and he obliged.

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