Every racing career has a turning point, and for Greg Biffle, it hasn’t been under the bright lights of NASCAR. It happened on a winter morning, in a series few fans still talk about, with a Hall of Fame runner watching quietly from the sidelines. Benny Parsons saw Greg Biffle in Winter Heat and recognized what others hadn’t done, and that’s what made all the difference in Biffle’s legendary career.
Parsons, a former NASCAR champion and broadcaster, noticed Biffle during a red flag session in the late 1990s at the event at Tucson Speedway.
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This moment was not by chance. Biffle’s rise from regional short track racer to nationally recognized NASCAR driver began during the 1995-96 NASCAR Winter Heat Series, which he dominated by winning the championship and attracting the attention of influential figures in the sport like Parsons.
With 126 of 150 laps remaining, Biffle had parked his car first during the wait when Parsons began a striking conversation about restarts and driving in general.
“Yeah, it is. Um, I was doing pretty good on those restarts, you know… You know, my crew chief calls me green, and then, you know, I change gears. We’re out of there. But, uh, the officials are getting pretty hard on me. You know, they say they’re going to hit me if I don’t start, uh, if I don’t start, start slower,” Biffle responded.
Parsons, already respected in the racing world for his insight and talent, was impressed enough to act. He actively advocated it to one of NASCAR’s major team owners, Jack Roush.
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Biffle later recounted this moment in an interview with Dale Jr. last year, explaining how quickly Parsons turned that brief exchange into something much bigger.
“Benny was impressed… and he put his hand on my back, he said, ‘I’ll pass your name around.’… Parson is in the Michigan garage again, talking to Jack Roush, and Jack says, ‘Hey, I couldn’t hire Tommy Kendall to drive my third team of trucks. He said, ‘Hey, don’t forget that kid I told you about in Washington; he’ll do a good job.’ He came back and told Jeff Smith to hire me,” he said.
For Biffle, the phone call from Redhead Race what followed didn’t seem like the next step in a career. It was like a life-changing break for me.
Biffle added that when he got the call offering to take him, it was “like winning the lottery.”
This chance opportunity turned into a career-defining break.
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The then 29-year-old driver joined Roush Racing in 1998. NASCAR Craftsman Truck Serieswas named rookie of the year, then won the 2000 truck championship.
He then captured the 2002 NASCAR Xfinity Series title and became a long-time contender in the Cup Series.
Without Parsons’ recommendation based on what he saw in Winter Heat, Biffle’s path to the national NASCAR scene might have been very different, transforming a regional star into a national auto racing star.
Fast forward to today, and NASCAR fans in the community can’t help but mourn the passing of the legend and recently gathered at the memorial in Charlotte.
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NASCAR community gathers for Biffle memorial
Bojangles Coliseum was filled with grieving racers, friends and fans Friday as the NASCAR community came together to remember Greg Biffle, his family and three others who lost their lives on plane last month accident near Statesville.
The building that was once built with tears instead held silence, reflection and stories of a life that went far beyond the racecourse.
Moreover, it was Jordyn Biffle, the niece of the NASCAR veteran, who could not hold back her tears.
“While this loss is devastating beyond words, its impact remains,” she said. “It is engraved in all of us who were lucky enough to know them, to love them and to be transformed by them.”
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Speakers included YouTube creator Garrett Mitchell, better known as Cletus McFarland, who described an unlikely and deeply meaningful friendship with Biffle. The two met in 2024 and Biffle quickly became a mentor.
“I’m proud to say I was able to meet Greg at the perfect time,” he said, drawing light laughter through his tears. “I think Greg wanted to become more of a YouTuber, but he didn’t realize it until he was 54.”
Jordyn also shared memories of Greg’s life outside of racing, talking about his wife, Christina, and their children, Emma and Ryder.
She highlighted the family’s work to bring relief to Western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene in 2024, describing generosity as a defining trait.
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“(The Biffles) lived fully, loved deeply and gave freely,” she said.
Also remembered are Craig Wadsworth, Dennis Dutton and Jack Dutton, who were killed alongside the Biffle family in the crash. Their names were spoken with the same care and respect, closing a service marked by loss but also by gratitude for lives that left a lasting mark.
The position The forgotten legacy of Winter Heat: How Benny Parsons’ red flag jokes quietly pushed Greg Biffle into NASCAR appeared first on EssentiallySport.
