Ankrum Ends 130-Race Truck Series Drought
Written by I Dig Sports
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. It had been so long since Tyler Ankrum won his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race that the driver of the No. 18 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet couldnt find victory lane after winning Fridays Blacks Tire 200 at Rockingham Speedway.
After a prodigious effort at saving fuel, Ankrum coasted across the finish line 6.657 seconds ahead of pole winner and runner-up Jake Garcia to break a 130-race drought dating to July 11, 2019.
Ankrums last win was so long ago that the track that gave him his maiden victory Kentucky Speedway has long since fallen off the NASCAR national series schedule.
In the series return to The Rock after an 11-year absence, Ankrum had to battle back from damage sustained during an accident on Lap 2, an incident that put him a lap down. Ankrum got his lap back as the beneficiary under caution for Stage 2 break after Lap 90 and embarked on a heroic drive to the front.
The trophy wasnt the only reward Ankrum got for the victory. He also earned a $50,000 check for winning the final Triple Truck Challenge race.
Its strange I didnt know where victory lane was at, Ankrum said after climbing from his truck. The way this day started, going a lap down and (crew chief) Mark (Hillman) making a pit call to get the track position back
Just saving fuel, man. I knew we were five (laps) short. I was hoping I had saved enough, and we did I just found something there where I was pretty much lifting 60 percent down the straightaway, and I was able to draft off of (Matt) Crafton and a couple of other guys, and I was able to save that way.
Its just surreal. I feel like this is pretty much the way it went down at Kentucky in 2019.
Ankrum took the lead for good on Lap 172 after Corey Heim and Gio Ruggiero came to pit road. The two TRICON Garage drivers stayed on the track during consecutive cautions early in the final stage and were running 1-2 before having to come to pit road for fuel.
Heim seemed confused by the strategy that kept him on the track while other top contenders pitted for the fuel they hoped would carry them to the end of the race.
I felt like if we had the track position we would have been in really good shape from the very start, said Heim, who started 15th and finished eighth. Just didnt have a good qualifying effort on my end. It was kind of an uphill battle from there all day.
I didnt exactly know what happened there the last 40 laps there, but we pitted, and it seems like some of the other guys didnt run of fuel. Unfortunate. Just a weird deal in that last stage but have to be better on my part to qualify better and have the track position.
Even though the Front Row Motorsports Fords of Layne Riggs and Chandler Smith pitted after Heims final stop, both ran short of fuel and had to bring their trucks to pit road in the closing laps.
Daniel Hemric, Rajah Caruth and Grant Enfinger benefited from the Fords gas shortage, finishing third, fourth and fifth, respectively.
Trouble continued to follow reigning series champion Ty Majeski, whose truck broke loose from the inside lane in Turn 1 while he was racing Enfinger on Lap 109. Majeskis No. 98 ThorSport Ford backed into the outside wall and was eliminated from the race. He finished 31st after a 13th-place run at Martinsville and a 33rd-place result at Bristol in the previous two races.
I cant really blame Grant, Majeski said. He held me tight, obviously took the air off my right side. Yeah, just embarrassed, honestly. These last three weeks isnt who I am as a driver. I feel so bad for everybody at ThorSport(owners) Duke and Rhonda (Thorson) yeah, I just need to be better.
Heim, who led a race-high 52 laps compared to 43 for Garcia and 29 for Ankrum, held the top spot in the series standings by 22 points over Chandler Smith and 62 points over Ankrum in third. Kaden Honeycutt, Jack Wood, Corey Heim, Connor Mosack and Gio Ruggiero finished sixth through 10th, respectively, in Saturdays race.