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The same hands that dominated Dover’s Truck Series race on Saturday have been wrapped around a steering wheel going nowhere on most Sundays. For Kyle Busch, that has been the story of 100-plus Cup races now. And at this point, Busch is unable to understand where he is going wrong and why he can’t get himself out of this misery.

“Yeah, I would say so. I mean, I would think anytime that you have positive mojo going, which, you know, when you have positive mojo going, it’s just kind of like it’s a good feeling, and it just kind of gives you that vote of confidence of just like, ‘Okay, we’re doing our job.’

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“And then when you’re—when you don’t have when you’re not doing well, you’re like, ‘Well, what am I doing wrong?’ Like, I’m doing everything I always would normally be doing. If you’re the car chief, you know I’m putting in what the engineers and the crew chief are telling me to put in there. Like, obviously, it’s not working. So, who’s the idiot here? You know which one of us?”

The internal situation at RCR had grown tense well before Busch started speaking this candidly. At Martinsville, he qualified 34th after struggling with what he called an “unbalanced” car, was then penalized when his crew lost a tire on pit road, and finished 34th. At Las Vegas, he called the car “broken” over the radio after going laps down as it faded through the race.

He also clashed with his spotter over the radio about his aggressiveness. And by the time Talladega produced his first top-10, RCR had already decided a change was necessary: crew chief Jim Pohlman, who had joined ahead of 2026 with strong Xfinity credentials but limited Cup experience, was replaced after just ten races by longtime RCR veteran Andy Street.

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