FORT WORTH, TX – It was, as Greg Biffle screamed over his radio at the checkered flag, an “awesome freaking drive.”

Awesome? Improbable was more to the point.

Biffle ended a self-imposed three-year retirement from NASCAR by winning Friday night’s 23rd annual SpeedyCash.com 400 at Texas Motor Speedway. Biffle, who last raced in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series on Nov. 19, 2004 at Homestead-Miami Speedway and last won in 2001, scored his second series victory on TMS’ high-banked/1.5-mile quad-oval in a one-off appearance in place of team-owner/driver Kyle Busch.

Biffle, the 2000 series champion, outlasted two-time series champ Matt Crafton by 0.9630s at the wheel of his No. 51 Toyota Tundra fielded by Kyle Busch Motorsports. Tyler Ankrum finished third after celebrating his graduation from high school during pre-race ceremonies, followed by Grant Enfinger and Harrison Burton.

“It feels really good to come back and drive a really fast truck. I really learned a lot tonight,” said Biffle, 49, whose last Truck Series win was at ISM Raceway in Phoenix in 2001. “This series – a lot of competitive trucks here, and these [KBM] guys make the difference. They made it easy for me. It was a great opportunity. Just excited to be here, just so thankful to drive great trucks. This thing was really fast.

“So many things went through my head of what I was going to expect. First and foremost I didn’t want to make any mistakes. I didn’t want to ‘run bad,’ in 15th. I felt we could run in the top five, top eight. Ultimately the win is always in the back of your mind.

“These things are humbling. I’ve been doing this a long, long time but I wasn’t pleased where I was in final practice (15th). So I was a bit nervous, but I talked to Kyle and I was learning clear to the checkered flag. This ranks pretty high for me [career-wise], for one of my wins.”

The win was sweetened by a $50,000 bonus for winning the opening round of NASCAR’s Triple Truck Challenge that continues next at Iowa Speedway.

“It’s great,” Biffle joked, already politicking for another start. “I’ve been off work a long time. But my phone’s back in the motorhome. I’ll get hold of Kyle…”

Biffle – working here with crew chief Rudy Fugle – now has 82 Truck Series races on his resume, with 17 wins, 43 top-five and 55 top-10 results. This was Bjffle’s sixth Truck Series start at TMS, where his previous win was scored in 2000. He qualified on pole and led 120 of 167 laps in that spring event en route to his championship for team-owner Jack Roush.

Biffle also scored Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series spring victories in 2005 and 2012 at TMS during his tenure with Roush Fenway Racing, which ended at the season-ending race at Homestead-Miami Speedway in November 2016.

Tonight, Biffle led twice for 18 laps in a race dominated by Enfinger, who led 44 laps in his No. 98 ProtectTheHarvest.com Ford F-150. Biffle took the lead for good from Ankrum on Lap 155 and eventually held Crafton at bay.

Enfinger led 44 laps, but faded to fourth at the finish. Image by Kinrade/LAT

Enfinger now leads the championship by 37 points over Stewart Friesen, who finished 20th after breaking loose and hitting the Turn 2 wall with his No. 52 Halmar International Chevrolet Silverado while trying to pass Biffle on the inside on lap 109 of the scheduled 167.

The race produced a record 13 caution periods, three more than the previous total and took 2 hours, 29 minutes and 39 seconds to complete.

Crafton said he needed a few more laps in his No. 88 Chi-Chi’s/Menards Ford to perhaps catch Biffle, whose fuel supply was in question. “We made hay with him and got there and just really got tight,” Crafton said. “It really sucks to finish second.”

Crafton posted his 27th top-10 finish in 38 races at TMS and his eighth top-10 result of 2019.

Ben Rhodes won Stage 2 over Friesen with Burton placing third. Rhodes, driver of the No. 99 Carolina Nut Ford, earned his first stage win of the season in a segment that saw Ankrum’s No. 17 RAILBLAZA Toyota slide sideways through the pits on a restart on Lap 75.

“I’m thankful for the pit strategy of my team; they got me track position,” Rhodes said after 15.9s pit stop at the end of the segment. It was a wasted effort, though, as Rhodes lost power and veered to the outside as the green flag fell on Lap 95. Rhodes returned to the pits on lap 96 – during the race’s record 11th caution – with what was reported as a transmission that was stuck in fourth gear.

Johnny Sauter, the defending event winner, won Stage 1 in a dash to the flag with Austin Hill following a short red-flag stoppage (1m16s) to clean up debris after Angela Ruch’s accident in Turn 2. Enfinger finished the 40-lap stage in third. It was the third stage win of the season for Sauter, who locked up a spot in the Playoffs by winning on Dover International Speedway’s Monster Mile.

Sauter’s night went awry on lap 56, however, when his No. 13 Tenda Heal Ford fielded by ThorSport Racing broke loose in the Turn 4 banking and slapped the wall with the right side. Sauter, the 2016 series champion whose five wins here is the most among active drivers, returned to finish 13th, one lap down.

Pole-sitter Todd Gilliland’s promising night took a hit when he spun out of the lead on a restart on lap 69 and whacked the backstretch wall. Gilliland, who qualified on pole at 184.761 mph earlier Friday, was pushed to the pits after his No. 4 Mobil 1 Toyota sustained heavy right side damage that disabled the battery.

“I got loose on the bottom and it’s not a lot of fun when that happens,” the third generation driver said. “I think we executed good until that. We qualified on pole, but it still sucks we’re out of this race. I thought we were going to have something for ‘em tonight.

“I need to be more patient, get smarter,” Gilliland added. “We’ve got an important stretch coming up and need to keep the morale up.”

By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service

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