Pit Stops : Texas Motor Speedway

SpeedyCash.com 250

Friday, May 2nd, 2025

Texas Motor Speedway , Fort Worth, TX

Texas Motor Speedway logo
  • 16
  • 10
  • 6

  • Friday, May 2nd, 2025
  • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
Corey Heim Muscles Through Chaos to Capture Overtime Truck Series Win at Texas

A casual glance at the box score might tell you Corey Heim’s victory in Friday night’s SpeedyCash.com 250 was a cakewalk.

Quite the contrary. Heim’s 14th career win was anything but easy.

The driver of the No. 11 TRICON Garage Toyota and CRAFTSMAN Truck Series points leader had to survive two overtimes at Texas Motor Speedway to pick up his first victory at the track and his third of the season.

Heim was barely ahead when caution stalled the first overtime almost before it began. The restart in the second extra period packed a surfeit of drama into the final two laps.

Starting second to Heim’s outside, Ben Rhodes held his ground, racing side-by-side through the first two corners. As the drivers navigated Turn 3, both had to lift off the gas, allowing Daniel Hemric to make a strong move to the inside at the start/finish line.

But Heim pressed the accelerator, charged between trucks and surged into the lead, clearing Hemric and Rhodes in Turn 1. Heim pulled away slightly to beat Hemric to the stripe by 0.279 seconds, as Rhodes lost momentum and faded to sixth.

“I wasn’t going to let that one get away from me,” said Heim, who led a race-high 96 of 174 laps and gained an extra Playoff point by winning Stage 2. “I’ve given up too many this year so far. “I’m just overwhelmed—so many restarts there at the end and guys were taking me three-wide.

“I wasn’t going to let them take it from me… They tried to take me three-wide into (Turn) 1, and I drove until I couldn’t any more.”

At age 22, Heim is the youngest driver in series history to reach 14 wins. Friday night‘s Truck Series race also was the first to go to overtime after 21 straight events had ended in regulation.

Rajah Caruth ran third behind Heim and Hemric, with Tyler Ankrum finishing fourth and Tanner Gray fifth.

Rhodes took issue with the way Heim raced him into Turn 3 on the white-flag lap in the second overtime.

“I was a little upset, and even still watching the replay, with how I was run in 3 and 4 by Heim,” said Rhodes, a two-time series champion. “Basically, to see him come off the bottom, and the groove is extremely narrow here. That’s why all those wrecks kept happening.

“I had to lift. I think he had to lift, and that’s what opened up for three-wide down the frontstretch and why we’re in sixth place.”

All told, the race produced 11 cautions for 57 laps, a testament to the intense action at the Fort Worth track.

Texas Motor Speedway, arguably the most treacherous 1.5-miler on the schedule, claimed three early victims. On Lap 31, rookie Giovanni Ruggiero drove too low entering the tri-oval, clipped the grass below the apron and shot up the track, collecting Brandon Jones and Kaden Honeycutt in a violent collision.

The impact ripped the right front wheel off Jones’ Toyota and destroyed Honeycutt’s Chevrolet.

“It is just so hard to see the grass here on the frontstretch when you’re behind other trucks,” Ruggiero said. “I definitely misjudged it on my part. Really unfortunate for all of my guys.

“We had a really fast JBL Tundra—definitely not how I wanted tonight to go. Just have to keep digging and come back stronger for the next one.”

On Lap 52, Layne Riggs spun underneath the Ford of reigning series champion Ty Majeski. Thirteen laps and two cautions later, Riggs was off course again after contact with Luke Fenhaus’ Ford, this time bouncing through the frontstretch grass and tearing the nose off his F-150.

Andres Perez de Lara backed into the Turn 2 wall on Lap 57, damaging his Chevrolet beyond repair. Before the end of the second stage, the race was peppered with six cautions, with the longest green-flag run coming from the start of the race to a competition caution at Lap 20.

The tenor of the race changed after the second stage break. During a 60-lap green-flag run that began on Lap 87 and featured a cycle of green-flag pit stops, Heim built a lead of 15.794 seconds before Frankie Muniz crashed in Turn 2 on Lap 147 to cause the eighth caution of the night.

From that point, the race reclaimed its frenetic character and required the two overtimes to get to the finish. The result left Heim 46 points ahead of second-place Chandler Smith in the series standings.

  • Drivers Entered: 32
  • Laps Scheduled: 167
  • Laps Actual: 174 - NASCAR OVERTIME!
  • Margin of Victory: 0.279 Seconds
  • Time of Race: 2 Hours 33 Minutes 31 Seconds
  • Average Speed: 102.008
  • Cautions: 11 for 57 laps
  • Lead Changes: 15
  • Green Flag Passes: 1,554 (13.3 passes per green flag lap)

  • Texas Motor Speedway
  • SpeedyCashcom 250
  • Race Winner: Corey Heim
  • Age: 22
  • Team : No 11 - Safelite/Foster Love Toyota
  • Owner: Johnny Gray
  • Crew Chief: Scott Zipadelli
  • Corey Heim won the SpeedyCashcom 250, his 14th victory in 72 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races
  • This is his third victory and seventh top-10 finish in 2025
  • This is his first victory and fourth top-10 finish in four races at Texas Motor Speedway
  • Daniel Hemric (second) posted his fourth top-10 finish in five races at Texas Motor Speedway It is his fifth top-10 finish in 2025
  • Rajah Caruth (third) posted his first top-10 finish in three races at Texas Motor Speedway
  • Dawson Sutton (ninth) was the highest finishing rookie
  • Corey Heim leads the point standings by 46 points over Chandler Smith
Truck Series pit stops at Bristol Motor Speedway
Bristol, Tennessee - September 17, 2020 : Truck Series pit stops at Bristol Motor Speedway
Jared C TiltonGetty Images

Pit Stop Summary Report

Aggregate of each driver's pit stops during the race.

Pit Stop Detailed Report

Each 2- and 4-wheel pit stop during the race.