Kyle Busch, Two-Time NASCAR Cup Series Champion, 41
Kyle Busch looks on during the driver's meeting prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on August 23, 2025, in Daytona Beach, Florida.
Kyle Busch, a generational talent who rose to become a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and one of the sport’s greatest drivers, died Thursday. He was 41.
Busch’s death, which was announced by the Busch family, NASCAR and Richard Childress Racing, marked a sudden, staggering blow to the motorsports community. His team had indicated earlier Thursday that Busch had been hospitalized with a severe illness.
Busch was in his 22nd full-time season in NASCAR’s top division, where he won two Cup Series titles (2015, 2019) and 63 races — a figure that ranks ninth on the circuit’s all-time win list. His numbers across the other two national NASCAR series are record-setting, with 102 victories in what is now called the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and 69 wins in the Craftsman Truck Series.
The Busch family, Richard Childress Racing and NASCAR made the following joint statement: "On behalf of the Busch family, everyone at Richard Childress Racing and all of NASCAR, we are devastated to announce the sudden and tragic passing of Kyle Busch.
"Our entire NASCAR family is heartbroken by the loss of Kyle Busch. A future Hall of Famer, Kyle was a rare talent, one who comes along once in a generation. He was fierce, he was passionate, he was immensely skilled and he cared deeply about the sport and fans. Throughout a career that spanned more than two decades, Kyle set records in national series wins, won championships at NASCAR's highest level and fostered the next generation of drivers as an owner in the Truck Series. His sharp wit and competitive spirit sparked a deep emotional connection with race fans of every age, creating the proud and loyal 'Rowdy Nation.' Our thoughts are with Samantha, Brexton and Lennix, Kyle and Samantha’s parents, Kurt and all of Kyle's family, Richard and Judy Childress, everyone at Richard Childress Racing, his teammates, friends and fans. NASCAR lost a giant of the sport today, far too soon.
"During this incredibly difficult time, we ask everyone to respect the family's privacy and continue to keep them in your thoughts and prayers. Further updates will be shared as appropriate."
Busch drove for three Hall of Fame team owners in Cup, getting his start with Hendrick Motorsports as a heralded rookie in stock-car racing's big leagues in 2005. He joined Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008, establishing a long-running partnership that made him the face of Toyota's NASCAR endeavors. He spent the final stages of his career with Childress, arriving in 2023 and taking the reins of the No. 8 Chevrolet.
At each phase of his career, Busch was a polarizing figure among fans––intensely popular for his adoring supporters and booed loudly by his detractors. He entered the sport as a brash teenager with the nickname "Shrub" as the younger brother to Hall of Famer Kurt Busch, but the alias of "Rowdy"––a nod to one of the main characters in "Days of Thunder" and to his aggressive style––is what stuck with him.
Kyle Thomas Busch was born May 2, 1985, into a racing family in Las Vegas. His father, Tom, was a mechanic who raced locally after he and his wife, Gaye, relocated from Schaumburg, Illinois. His brother, Kurt, was seven years older and set a competitive benchmark for him to aspire to on the track.
Kyle Busch followed many of the same steps that his brother did in accelerating up the racing ladder––family go-karts on makeshift tracks in cul-de-sacs and parking lots, Legends Cars at the Vegas bullring before a move to full-bodied Late Model competition. Kurt hinted at the impact his brother would make in 2001: "You think I'm a pretty good race car driver? Wait until you see my brother. He's the best driver in the family."
Kyle Busch's path to NASCAR was also in line with his brother’s career arc, and Kyle joined his team when he signed with team owner Jack Roush as a 16-year-old junior in high school. That deal was derailed shortly after it began, when NASCAR raised its minimum age requirements to 18 for national-series competition in 2001.
Kyle Busch takes a bow after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series ECOSAVE 200 at Dover Motor Speedway on May 15, 2026, in Dover, Delaware.
The rule-mandated break from Roush also gave the younger Busch an opportunity to "step out of the shadow of Kurt," he said, to forge his own identity. "I need to be my own person and make my own way and show everybody that I can drive," he told the Associated Press in 2003, the same year he signed on to Rick Hendrick's organization.
Showing everybody his talent came quickly. Busch made his O'Reilly Series debut for Hendrick on May 24, 2003, finishing second to Matt Kenseth at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He made a splash when he entered the series full-time the next year, winning five races and finishing second overall to Martin Truex Jr.
As those victories began to accumulate, Busch created what would become a patented celebration, punctuating each win with a showman’s bow. The gesture served as a tribute to his roots as a Vegas native but also a flourish like a magician appearing from the smoke of another triumphant burnout.
Busch reached the Cup Series with a six-race audition in 2004 before a full-fledged rookie campaign the next year, paired with crew chief Alan Gustafson in the No. 5 Chevrolet. He became the premier series' youngest winner in his 31st Cup start, prevailing at Auto Club Speedway for the first of four wins he’d collect in his three full seasons with Hendrick.
Busch made what would become a pivotal move after Hendrick signed Dale Earnhardt Jr. for the 2008 season, aligning with Coach Joe Gibbs and Toyota in another blockbuster deal. Busch was already becoming an established Cup Series star, but the combination of his colorful No. 18 car with M&M's sponsorship became one of the sport's most recognizable.
His 15-year association with Joe Gibbs Racing was one of the sport’s most successful tenures, with at least one victory in each of those seasons. Busch scored 56 of his 63 Cup Series wins with the former NFL coach, adding 90 more O'Reilly wins and a series championship in 2009.
Busch also made his mark during that time as a team owner in the Craftsman Truck Series, fielding trucks for himself and a host of future Cup stars. His Kyle Busch Motorsports entries won 100 races from 2010 to 2023, adding two championships––one with Erik Jones in 2015 and another two years later with Christopher Bell.
Busch left JGR after the 2022 season and a series of drawn-out negotiations, starting a new chapter with Childress and joining the Chevrolet camp in the No. 8 Camaro. The agreement seemed to be a tenuous one, struck nearly a dozen years after Childress initiated a post-race physical altercation in the Kansas Speedway garage. The Hall of Fame team owner made it known that the bygones had passed, making a humorous reference to his "hold my watch" comment before their scuffle as he gave Busch his own timepiece as a welcoming gift.
Busch won three races in the No. 8 Chevy in the first half of the 2023 season but was mired in the longest dry spell of his career at the time of his passing. His final Cup Series win came June 4, 2023, at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway.
Kyle Busch is survived by his parents and his wife, Samantha, whom he married on New Year’s Eve in 2010, and two children––son Brexton, who turned 11 on Monday, and 4-year-old daughter Lennix.
PRI sends its condolences to the Busch family.
Lead photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images
Second photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images
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