CONCORD, N.C. — Chris Buescher always dreaded this part of the job.
He had just finished wheeling the No. 16 Roush Fenway Racing Ford to a seventh-place result at Michigan International Speedway on June 15, 2013. Now, as the race at Road America approached, Buescher was tasked with taking his seat out and putting another one in back at the shop.
It’s a simple maneuver, one that’s necessary in NASCAR as the race car seats are form-fitting to each driver. But the seat represented another ride that was not his, another driver who would be piloting the No. 16 instead of him, while he stood on the sidelines as a part-time employee in the race shop.
“It took a lot of will power to take your seat in and out of a race car and put another driver’s in it, knowing that that’s exactly where you wanted to be, but were not able to at the time,” Buescher said about a task he performed nine times in 2013. “It was a tough one for me, to be able to do that. I had to go to the race track, had to help the guys through the weekend, had to put the pit sign out for pit stops, get the guys on the right spot.”
But soon, it would be just his signature –- no one else’s — on top of the Roush Fenway Racing Ford.
All paths lead to North Carolina
Relaxed and dressed in work pants, a T-shirt and sneakers at the capacious Roush Fenway Racing campus in Concord, North Carolina, Buescher is the epitome of a man’s man — absent is the air of fame that surrounds many who spend their lives in the spotlight.
He grins when he recalls having to buy a tuxedo because he didn’t even own a suit — much less a tux — until recently.
And he recounts moments of humbleness and times of challenge that molded him into the driver he is today: A winning wheelman who is leading the NASCAR XFINITY Series points standings in his second full-time year in the series and ready to contend for his first championship title.
Anything to race
Buescher is 12 years old. He’s seated in his living room in his Prosper, Texas, home with his parents. And they’re asking him to make a big decision, one that will impact his entire life.
He still remembers that day vividly.
“They said, ‘Look, if you want to do this as a hobby, great. We’ll go run on Saturday nights, we’ll have fun here in Texas and you can continue to go through school and figure out something you want to do as your career. Or you can make racing your career.'”
Buescher surrounded himself with racing. He spent summers racing Legends cars in the racing capital of the United States — Charlotte, North Carolina. He slept many nights on the couch of now-No. 16 Sprint Cup crew chief Matt Puccia, trying to gain experience during the summer in the little time he had away from school.
“Just happened to be the short couch, so my knees would end up on one armrest and my neck on the other,” Buescher joked. “Not the most comfortable way to spend three months.”
“It usually started out with, ‘Hey, do you mind if we stay at your house for a few nights?'” Puccia said with a chuckle at Talladega Superspeedway on Oct. 23. “And it ended up being the whole summer and into fall sometimes.
“But you could tell really at a young age when he was first running Legends cars how much talent that he was going to have. He just had a natural ability of being able to adapt to those cars.”
Eventually it was time for him to make a more permanent decision. In 2008 — without a driver’s license, even — 15-year-old Buescher left his childhood town in Texas for Charlotte. This time, he wouldn’t return home at summer’s end.
“(I said to myself) ‘Man, you better take this opportunity or somebody else will,'” Buescher said. “… It was that time where you really had to commit. I had to drive the 17, 18 hours up to Charlotte, unpack what little belongings I had at the time and try and make racing work.
“… That was the hardest part of it was trying to leave home so young, knowing I had two sisters, I had all my friends back there still and not wanting to leave at all just to try and make this work.”
But Buescher wasn’t alone. He had a family waiting for him up in the Tarheel State that was ready to embrace him with open arms and would ultimately help advance his racing career: The Ragans.
A second family
Buescher had met Ken Ragan — Cup driver and father of Sprint Cup Series regular David Ragan — while racing Legends cars. At the time, Ragan was in charge of 600 Racing, Inc., a company that manufactures and sponsors Legends cars worldwide.
Their initial meeting, however, wasn’t ideal.
“Through unfortunate circumstances, (I) got to be in his office for a lengthy lecture after I got black-flagged one weekend,” Buescher recalled with a smile and chuckle. “So, it was a rocky start, but it turned into a great friendship over the course of the next few summers.”
The Ragans gave Buescher a roof over his head, while offering a valuable connection to the racing community. He maintained the family’s yard, completed his high school work online and tried to make it as a race car driver.
Soon, that success came for Buescher, as he joined Roush Fenway Racing as a part-time XFINITY driver in 2011 and won his first ARCA championship in 2012. But even in times of triumph, the journey to the top doesn’t always pay as it should.
“It got to the point where I was ready to go get a job part-time so I could afford to live and still race,” Buescher said.
The solution came in the form of a job as an interior specialist in the shop, which provided him with the monetary support he needed — and allowed him to learn how his own race cars operate.
“You want to know if a piece of suspension is broken and you’re out on the race track, you want to be able to describe where it’s coming from and you want to know a basic idea of what you’re describing,” Buescher said. “You want to be able to tell them, ‘Look here first.’ … And I think that’s important and there’s a lot of guys that don’t have that now.”
Buescher enjoyed the side gig so much that he continues to work in the shop today, decaling many of his own helmets, helping the shop employees during teardown and even building a small AC box for the garage. It’s a bit of an old-school approach, reminiscent of a time in NASCAR when drivers would pull their own trailers to the track.
But that’s just how Buescher operates — an old soul in the body of a 23-year-old race car driver.
Turning bad luck into opportunity
Mother Nature was not on Buescher’s side that day down at Daytona International Speedway.
He had finally gotten his start as a XFINITY Series full-time driver for Roush Fenway Racing and was set to qualify for his first race that season in February 2014. During the opening round of knockout qualifying, rain began to fall, halting the first session and ultimately canceling the final two rounds.
Buescher’s No. 60 Ford didn’t make the field.
“I didn’t get to run the first race of the season and that really hurt,” Buescher said. “That was one of those times when you had to sit in a motorhome or on a pit box during the race and watch when you should have been in there, that you were fast enough all through testing, that you were fast enough through practice, you were top-five on the charts — there was no reason not to be in that race.
“And you sit there the whole time and think, ‘What can I do to make sure this never happens again?’ And that was the time we really put our heads down as a team — we’re a new team, we’re all together for the first race, and we didn’t get to run it. So, as we went into the next handful of races in the year, we decided we had nothing to lose. We could take chances, let’s all learn together and let’s go win some races.”
That’s what they did. Buescher earned his first XFINITY win at Mid-Ohio that year, carrying momentum into the 2015 season, where two wins and 11 top-fives have propelled him to No. 1 in the series standings. With three races remaining on the schedule, the No. 60 driver’s chance at a trophy draws closer.
“I looked at what we have coming up and I feel great about our chances,” Buescher said. “… It’s been a tough several weeks leading up to this point and these last (three) are not going to be any easier. I know that.”
The champion won’t be crowned until November, but given his chances as we look to Homestead, Buescher had better have a tuxedo ready — just in case.