Kyle Busch has carved out a legacy at Nashville Superspeedway that’s as bold as the man himself -- a blend of raw talent, razor-sharp focus and a personality that refuses to fade into the background.
Busch is a five-time winner at Nashville Superspeedway, second only to Carl Edwards’ six wins. He’ll have two chances to match or even eclipse Edwards’ win total in 2025.
On May 30, Busch will return to the 1.33-mile concrete oval for the Rackley Roofing 200, piloting the No. 07 Chevrolet Silverado for Spire Motorsports in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. Two days later he’ll be behind the wheel for the NASCAR Cup Series showdown under the lights.
Busch’s latest trip to Nashville Superspeedway’s victory lane came in 2021 during the Tennessee Lottery 250 Xfinity Series race. Busch powered to his 100th career Xfinity Series victory, leading 122 of 189 laps and outdueling Justin Allgaier in a tense green-white-checkered finish.
“It was way racier than I remember Nashville being,” Busch said after the race, his voice carrying the weight of a driver who’d just rewritten the record books. “At the end, I knew if we could clear those guys and I could hit my marks I could pull away.”
That win was his second in the Xfinity Series at Nashville, adding to a haul that includes two Truck Series victories and an ARCA Menards Series triumph from 2003, back when he was a hungry prospect with Hendrick Motorsports.
Five wins total -- a number that cements Nashville as one of his favorite hunting grounds.
The Cup Series has been a tougher nut to crack at Nashville Superspeedway but Busch’s runs here are never dull. In 2023, Busch clawed his way to ninth despite a litany of setbacks -- a cut tire, a speeding penalty, a wreck. “Hard charger mode,” he posted on X afterward, proud of the fight that brought him back from the brink.
The 2024 edition of the Ally 400 was a gut punch of a race for Busch. He was in line for a top-five finish in the Cup Series event until a five-overtime melee dropped him to 27th.
“Those cautions at the end and into overtime really worked against us,” he told NBC Sports after the race. “We were fourth when the No. 5 ran out of fuel just ahead of me, and I had nowhere to go. It’s frustrating for sure.”
From his first ARCA win in 2003 to that milestone 100th Xfinity victory in 2021, Busch has made Nashville Superspeedway his stage.
For Busch, this track isn’t just concrete and corners. It’s where he’s built a legend, one lap, one outburst, one trophy at a time.
Catch him in action this May 30 at the Rackley Roofing 200 and June 1 for the NASCAR Cup Series night race. Grab your tickets now at NashvilleSuperspeedway.com or call 866.RACE.TIX to witness the next chapter live.