“I Wasn’t Ready” — Daniel Suarez Wins the Coca-Cola 600 for Kyle Busch in a Victory Lane Nobody Will Ever Forget

He was supposed to be focused. Locked in. Ready to race 600 miles around one of NASCAR’s most demanding tracks on one of the sport’s biggest nights of the year.

Instead, Daniel Suarez sat inside his car before the green flag dropped at Charlotte Motor Speedway — and for one of the very few times in his career, he simply was not ready.

“I would say that is probably the first time or second time ever that I jump in my car and I don’t feel like I had that moment to disconnect,” Suarez admitted after the race. “There were so many emotions. I feel like when I jumped in the car, I wasn’t ready.”

He won anyway. And in doing so, he gave 95,000 people inside Charlotte Motor Speedway — and millions more watching at home — exactly the ending this impossible weekend needed.

NASCAR officials make major decision on Coca-Cola 600 after tragic death of Kyle  Busch - Yahoo News Australia

A Race That Became Something Else

The Coca-Cola 600 was always going to carry weight this weekend. Set on Memorial Day, the race has long held a spirit of remembrance. But this year, with Kyle Busch — two-time Cup Series champion and the winningest driver in NASCAR history — gone just days after collapsing during a simulator test in Concord, North Carolina, the race became something no organizer could have scripted.

It became a memorial service with 95,000 guests.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Kurt Busch lays white roses on the "8" stenciled of the infield grass during the remembrance ceremony for his brother, Kyle Busch.

The black No. 8 stenciled into the infield grass. Eight white roses laid by Kyle’s family at its center. Messages written by fans across the finish line. His number displayed atop the tower before the race — still marking his pole position, as if the sport was not yet ready to erase him from the entry list.

When the Charlotte Fire Department Pipe Band played “Amazing Grace,” dry eyes were nearly impossible to find anywhere inside that grandstand.

The Moment That Broke Suarez Open

Before he ever climbed into his car, Suarez walked through the pre-race ceremony alongside Kyle’s family — wife Samantha, son Brexton, daughter Lennix, brother Kurt and parents Tom and Gaye. What he witnessed there changed the complexion of everything that followed.

Daniel Suarez, driver of the #7 Freeway Insurance Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“Seeing Samantha today for the first time, that totally broke my heart,” Suarez said. “I saw Brexton as well, and for a split second I grabbed him and I gave him a kiss on his head.”

It was a small gesture. But from a man who understood better than most what Kyle Busch meant — not just as a champion, but as a person — it carried enormous weight.

The Side of Kyle Busch Most People Never Saw

Suarez did not simply admire Kyle Busch from a distance. For years, the two spoke on the phone every single week — Busch helping Suarez study the craft, break down races, understand what to look for and how to improve.

“He didn’t have to help me,” Suarez said, his voice raw. “He didn’t have to help this Mexican kid that can barely speak English. He was already a legend of the sport, and he took the time every single week to help me. Most people didn’t know that side of him. I got to know that side of him.”

He paused. “Because of those things, he made me want to be like him.”

A general view of the "8 Kyle Busch" stencil on the infield grass during a weather delay in the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series Charbroil 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Saturday in Concord, North Carolina.

Racing On, The Way Kyle Would Have Wanted

NASCAR CEO Steve O’Donnell said on Friday there was never any consideration given to postponing or canceling the race. Kyle Busch, he said, would have hated that idea. And the tens of thousands of fans who packed Charlotte Motor Speedway on Sunday proved the sport understood that instinctively.

Samantha Busch and Brexton Busch embrace one another on the grid during the remembrance ceremony for Kyle Busch.

On lap eight, the grandstands fell into a spontaneous, unified tribute — fans raising eight fingers on each hand in silence as the pack thundered past, then erupting into cheers and pointing skyward.

Layne Riggs, winner of Sunday’s Truck Series race, performed Kyle’s signature bow from victory lane — and wiped tears from his eyes as he did it.

When the rain finally came on lap 373 and NASCAR called the 600 short, it was Suarez out front. He had held off Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell on back-to-back restarts and defended brilliantly until the weather made the decision for everyone.

In victory lane, choking back tears while fellow drivers embraced him, he said the first thing that came to his mind when he crossed that line.

NASCAR fans display a "8 Kyle Busch" flag during the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series Charbroil 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May Saturday in Concord, North Carolina.

“The very first thing that came to my mind was Kyle.”