Kyle Busch is on fire with an explosive start to the 2019 NASCAR season.

Not only did the 33-year-old driver earn his 200th win across all three of NASCAR’s national series a couple weeks ago, but he’s accumulating wins at an exceptionally fast rate. Through 14 races in the NASCAR Cup, XFINITY and Truck series, Busch has won nine times, which means he currently hold an outrageous 64.3 win percentage.

At Texas Motor Speedway this weekend, Busch is already 2-for-2. He took the checkered flag Friday in the Truck Series’ Vankor 350 and followed that up with a win in the XFINITY Series’ My Bariatric Solutions 300 on Saturday.

He could complete his first three-race sweep of the season, should he win Sunday’s Cup Series race. He’s starting 16th.

However, his dominance across all three series won’t last for long. NASCAR allows drivers with more than five years of full-time Cup Series experience to compete in a maximum of five Truck Series and seven XFINITY Series events. So he only has one Truck and three XFINITY Series races left this season.

Although if Busch had his way, the rules would be a bit different, calling the current situation a “damn shame.”

“Why don’t you let us run as many races as we want to run and then once we miss one, we’re done?” Busch said, via NBC Sports, after his Martinsville Truck win last weekend. “So if I go all the way to (the June 15 race at Iowa Speedway) in the trucks and run 10 races and can’t go to Iowa, I’m done. “You can race for points or whatever and so if that ever came down to that, then maybe there’d be an opportunity years down the road that then you can run multiple series and try to go after a championship that way.”

But he knows exactly how unrealistic and unwanted that suggestion is, adding that “there’s not a damn fan that’s ever going to let it happen.”

Nevertheless, Busch’s win total for 2019 is already pretty impressive, so let’s break it down by series.

At the top, Busch has won two of six Cup races going into Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 500. He took back-to-back checkered flags, first at ISM Raceway near Phoenix and then two weeks ago at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California. The the first trip to Victory Lane automatically qualified him for the 10-race, 16-driver playoffs in the fall, while the latter marked his 200 career wins milestone.

While Busch has won a third of the Cup Series races so far, he and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin combine for half the 2019 race wins, and Team Penske’s Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano have the other half.

It’s the first time since 1999 that two race teams have swept the first six events — a surprising stat by itself.

Ahead of Sunday’s race, Busch has two checkered flags and has finished in the top 10 exactly 50 percent of the time in 26 career Cup starts at Texas. He won this spring race last year at the 1.5-mile track — his first of eight victories in 2018.

This season in the XFINITY Series, with Sunday’s checkered flag, Busch has won three of the four second-tier races he entered. His other wins came at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, his home track, and ISM Raceway, while he finished second to Cole Custer two weeks ago in Fontana. Winning 75 percent of the time this year isn’t too bad.

And then there’s the Truck Series, in which Busch has been absolutely perfect. He is 4-for-4 this season, winning at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, Martinsville Speedway last weekend and then Friday at Texas.

But stats aside, plenty of NASCAR fans aren’t thrilled that Busch is allowed to (and often praised for) going down to the lower-tiered series and beating out drivers who aren’t racing at his level. It’s often equated to playing in Major and Minor League Baseball or returning to play against college guys as a pro.

But he’s well within NASCAR’s rules to do this. And, as NBC Sports’ Dustin Long pointed out Friday after Busch’s Truck Series win, it’s not like he’s only beating out kids who are 10 to 15 years his junior.

#NASCAR .. For those who don't like @KyleBusch winning Truck races because he's beating "the kids" … well … Kyle was the youngest driver in the top 5 tonight: 1. Kyle Busch, 33 years

2. Stewart Friesen, 35

3. Johnny Sauter, 40

4. Grant Enfinger, 34

5. Matt Crafton, 42 — Dustin Long (@dustinlong) March 30, 2019

Love him or hate him, Busch continues to prove he’s one of NASCAR’s best drivers and greatest villain, and he isn’t going anywhere — until he maxes out his XFINITY and Truck starts.

Is @KyleBusch ever not going to race in the young guns series? Like we get it you can beat the kids way to go🙄 — Taylor Stanton (@Taylor_Stanton3) March 30, 2019

This year has been unwatchable no thanks to him. — Austin Lockhart (@AspiringRacer4) March 30, 2019

Kyle Busch won? Sure glad I was sleeping instead of watching. — Shelby (@ShelbyGray_) March 30, 2019

Stop driving in the lower series to pad your stats. You are destroying the trucks and the Xfinity series. It’s Tiger woods playing against college kids. He’s going to win. Just STOP. — Matt Smith (@23mattsmith23) March 30, 2019

Kyle Busch does it again wins against kids why. At this point we know he a best driver so this just my opinion Why don't we ban monster cup from Xfinity and trucks completely?? Just my opinion — FaZe Hyper (@JoneaJeremy) March 30, 2019