
Kyle Busch kept racing. That is what makes his death on May 21 so hard to believe.
Six days before he died, he won the Truck Series race at Dover Dover Motor Speedway and was on video saying, “you never know when the last one is.” A week before that, he called for a doctor, saying he needed a medical attention at the Cup Series event in Watkins Glen.
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Somewhere during that time, his family says, bacterial pneumonia was already moving though him.
Here is how Kyle Busch’s final month unfolded.
Early May: Still chasing first win since June 2023
Busch just turned 41 on May 2. He was 70-plus races into a winless Cup streak that started in June of 2023. In his second year at Richard Childress Racing, he was still driving the No. 8 Chevrolet, thinking the next win was around the corner. People around the sport had been whispering if this “was it for Rowdy?” for two seasons.
But he kept showing up.
May 10: Asks for doctor at Watkins Glen
He raced the Cup event at the Glen. During the race, he got on the radio and told his team he needed a doctor, the Fox broadcast reported that he was fighting a sinus cold.
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May 15: Dover, Truck Series victory
Buch put the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet on the pole and led for 147 of the 200 laps of the Ecosave 200. He held off Ty Majeski by three seconds. It was his fifth Truck win at Dover. His 69th Truck Series win over his career. It was his 239th NASCAR victory across the three series, more than anyone who has ever done it.
He took a bow at the finish line.
Fox Sports’ Amanda Busick asked him why those moments never get old.
“Because you never know when the last one is, you know?”
After that race, he also told The Athletic that he was still not recovered from the cold.
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“I’m still not great. The cough was pretty substantial last week.”
May 17: All-Star race wreck
He ran the All-Star, a 350-lap exhibition race, but got caught in a nine-car wreck at the end of the first segment. He finished 17th as Denny Hamlin won.
May 19: On the go-kart track with son Brexton
He brought his son Brexton to the opening of the Andretti Indoor Karting & Games in Durham, North Carolina, track. Brexton had turned 11 just the day before. Mario Andretti acknowledged Busch in his remarks at the ribbon cutting.
It was his last public appearance.
May 20: The 911 call
Busch was inside the GM Charlotte Technical Center testing in a Chevrolet racing simulator. At 5:32 p.m., a man called 911 from that building.
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The caller said he had someone with shortness of breath, very hot, thought he was going to pass out and was coughing up blood. He said the man was awake on the bathroom floor. He asked that the ambulance cut its sirens and said someone would meet them outside.
Busch was rushed to a Charlotte hospital.
May 21: Hospitalized before death announced
Around midday, RCR said Busch had been hospitalized with a severe illness and would miss the Coca-Cola 600. According to the death certificate, he died at 4:37 p.m. NASCAR posted the announcement of Busch’s death at 5:40 p.m. in a joint statement with the Busch family and RCR.
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The death certificate said that he had bacterial pneumonia for days to weeks. He had sepsis for about a day. He had small blood clots forming, choking off his blood supply, or disseminated intravascular coagulation. He went into hemorrhagic shock. They ruled the manner of death as natural.
Busch was cremated in Mooresville after an autopsy.
May 23: Charlotte weekend
Austin Hill climbed into a renumbered No. 33 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet for the Coca-Cola 600. Corey Day got the Spire Truck seat at Charlotte.
The Busch family released a statement through the VP of Kyle Busch Companies explaining he had died of pneumonia that progressed into sepsis. They asked for privacy.
Missing man formation of pace car and drivers drive a lap in honor of deceased driver Kyle Busch during the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 24, 2026
May 24: Racing world mourns
The Indy 500 paid tribute to Kyle Busch on their eighth lap, putting his picture and memorial to him on the scoring pylon. The broadcast went quiet.
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In Charlotte later that day, Busch’s wife Samantha, their two children Brexton and Lennix, 4, his parents and brother, Hall of Famer Kurt Busch, took part in a pre-race tribute at the Charlotte Motor Speedway.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kyle Busch’s death: A timeline of NASCAR driver’s final month
