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Drivers Voice Safety Concerns About Next Gen Car After Kurt Busch Injury

Denny Hamlin, driver of the #11 FedEx Office Toyota, Kyle Busch, driver of the #18 M&Ms Toyota, Kyle Larson, driver of the #5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, Chase Elliott, driver of the #9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet, and Ryan Blaney, driver of the #12 Menards/Duracell Ford, lead the field to start during the NASCAR Cup Series M&M's Fan Appreciation 400 at Pocono Raceway on July 24, 2022 in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

SPEEDWAY, Ind. – While racing for the NASCAR Cup Series pole at Pocono Raceway last weekend, Kurt Busch lost control and had a hard rear-end crash into the outside wall. Busch was not medically cleared to race the following day at Pocono due to a concussion, and Ty Gibbs was a last-minute substitution in the No. 45 car.

But after having a week to recover, Busch was ruled out for tomorrow’s (July 31) Verizon 200 at the Brickyard as well.

During Saturday’s Cup media bullpen at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday, July 30, drivers voiced well wishes to Busch while detailing their own experiences and questions about the new car.

Joey Logano stated that NASCAR should look into the safety for the new car, but he first praised the Next Gen’s role in flips and the structure of the roll cage.

“I think we need to take a serious look into [the car],” Logano said. “It would be dumb if we don’t with what’s going on. In my mind, the car is no doubt safer for intrusion. The [Ryan] Newman crash, my wreck at Talladega [Superspeedway, last April], roll cage crush-type things. Good for that.”

Despite the Next Gen’s ability in protecting a driver in the most terrifying crashes, Logano said that the more commonplace accidents hurt more than they used to with the new car.

“For 99% of the crashes where you used to just get out and be OK, it hurts now,” he said. “I went through a few of them this year and we’ve wrecked more stuff this year than we ever have and we’re in a car that’s different than ever. It hurts. I hate it for Kurt; he’s going through what he’s going through, and it’s awful. And I’m glad he’s doing the right things to make sure he’s healthy and recovers correctly.

“Every single driver gets out and says that it hurts more, I’m pretty sure. I don’t care what the numbers say after that because there’s a pretty good data recorder inside there that’s holding onto the steering wheel.”

Kyle Larson echoed some of the same concerns, and he also noted that rear-end impacts appear to hurt more than front-end crashes.

“Yeah, [I’ve noticed a difference] with the rear end,” Larson said. “I’ve crashed this year, but it’s been all frontal stuff and it feels comparable to last year’s stuff. I did spin out at Darlington [Raceway] at a test and backed into the wall and it was way harder than it was before. That’s kind of how he hit, so yeah, I mean, that’s concerning, but I think everybody’s…

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