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Kyle Busch waits on the grid during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race weekend at Watkins Glen International on August 9, 2025, in Watkins Glen, New York.
Kyle Busch’s death has left the NASCAR world searching through recent moments with a different kind of emotion.
One of them came just weeks earlier at Watkins Glen International.
During the NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday, May 10, Busch made a quiet but now-chilling request over his in-car radio, asking his team to find a doctor after the race.
“Can somebody try to find Bill Heisel?” Busch said over the radio. “He’s the kindred doctor guy. Tell him I need him after the race, please.”
His team asked where Busch wanted to meet him.
“Do you want Mr. Bill at your car or at your bus after the race?” the team responded.
Busch answered: “Bus. I’m going to need a shot.”
The team replied: “Copy. He’ll be at your bus.”
At the time, the exchange sounded like a driver trying to manage a difficult race day while dealing with an illness or medical issue.
But after Busch’s shocking death at age 41, the radio clip has resurfaced across social media and taken on a much heavier meaning for NASCAR fans.
According to posts circulating with the audio, the broadcast noted during the Watkins Glen race that Busch had been dealing with a sinus issue during the week.
There is no public confirmation that the Watkins Glen radio exchange was connected to Busch’s death. But the timing has made the clip difficult for many fans to hear now.
What once sounded like a routine medical request after a grueling race now feels haunting in hindsight.
The resurfaced audio quickly sparked emotional reactions online, with fans pointing to how different the exchange feels after Busch’s passing.
The clip also added another layer of sadness to a week already filled with tributes from across NASCAR and the broader sports world.
Busch’s death stunned fans, drivers, teams, and media members because he remained such an active, visible force in the sport. Just a few days before his passing, he was still competing, still winning races, still drawing attention, and still carrying the same intensity that defined his career.
That is part of why the Watkins Glen audio has hit so hard.
It is not dramatic or loud. And it is not the fiery Kyle Busch fans heard so many times over the years.
It is simply Busch asking for help after a race.
Busch was one of the most accomplished and polarizing drivers in NASCAR history.
A two-time Cup Series champion, he built a career on raw speed, fierce competitiveness, and an ability to win in almost anything he drove. He was known as “Rowdy” for a reason, but behind the boos, rivalries, and hard racing was a driver whose talent was respected throughout the garage.
In the days since his death, tributes have poured in from teammates, competitors, major sports organizations, and fans who grew up watching him race.
Now, as NASCAR continues to process the loss, moments like the Watkins Glen radio exchange are being revisited with a painful new perspective.
At the time, it was just a brief in-race communication.
Now, it is one more reminder of how suddenly everything changed.
Maggie MacKenzie Maggie MacKenzie covers NASCAR for Heavy.com. She previously worked for NASCAR.com, where she reported, wrote, and edited race-weekend coverage and traveled to key events throughout the season. She has more than ten years of experience in sports media and is based in Boston, Massachusetts. More about Maggie MacKenzie
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