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In Charlotte, untold stories flow about NASCAR star Greg Biffle and his family

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Seven weeks before his first NASCAR Cup Series win — a win that would propel the driver to rookie of the year honors and put him on the fast track to becoming one of the sport’s superstars — Greg Biffle was in trouble.

He’d broken his arm doing something rookies shouldn’t do. And no one could know that he’d done it.

“Now, Greg broke his arm by” — air quotes — “climbing in the motor home, which just so happened to be out in the sand dunes, where there are sand rails and 1,000-horse-power cars and four-wheelers,” said Jeff Burton, Biffle’s longtime teammate at Roush Fenway Racing, chuckling as he recalled the story.

“He’d concocted a plan and needed (his PR manager) Patrick (Clay Rogers) to play along with it,” Burton said. “He’s not going to tell anybody about the broken arm. Because when you’re a rookie, you can’t go out and have fun and break your arm and show up at the racetrack. That’s a good way to lose your job.”

Former NASCAR driver Jeff Burton speaks during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
Former NASCAR driver Jeff Burton speaks during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

That 2003 race was in Fontana, California. Pushing 118 degrees. Biffle, the gregarious type who’d show up early on race days, showed up just in time for practice, Burton remembered — and in a winter coat to cover his bulky cast.

The practice session would go fine. So would qualifying. Biffle spun out once on an early restart during the actual race, then put together a dignified run that yielded 18th place.

“And a bit of humility from me: I finished 19th without a broken arm,” Burton said. “And seven races later, Greg Biffle went on to win his first Cup race at Daytona. That’s Greg. We have a problem, we’re going to deal with it. We’re going to figure it out.”

Greg Biffle, the former NASCAR driver and Hall of Fame nominee whose work during Hurricane Helene saved countless lives across western North Carolina, died in a Statesville plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025. He was 55 years old.
Greg Biffle, the former NASCAR driver and Hall of Fame nominee whose work during Hurricane Helene saved countless lives across western North Carolina, died in a Statesville plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025. He was 55 years old. Sarah Crabill Getty Images

Burton shared this never-publicly-told story about Biffle on Friday in Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, standing on a stage in front of seven wreaths cloaked in white roses. Those wreaths represented the seven people who died in a plane crash last month at a regional airport in Statesville. The deceased: Greg Biffle; his wife, Cristina; his daughter, Emma; his son, Ryder; his best friend, Craig Wadsworth; a pilot, Dennis Dutton; and Dennis’s son, Jack.

Photos of the seven people who died in a plane crash in Statesville on Dec. 18, 2025, are displayed during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony Friday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. Among the people killed was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
Photos of the seven people who died in a plane crash in Statesville on Dec. 18, 2025, are displayed during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony Friday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. Among the people killed was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

It was a morning of stories that flowed like milk and honey and motor oil. Phil Parsons, the brother of Benny Parsons, retold the story of how Benny introduced Biffle to Jack Roush and got him into NASCAR. That career, of course, led to 19 wins over 515 starts and a NASCAR Hall of Fame nomination — all of which the 600 mourners in the crowd had been reminded of a lot over the past 29 days.

Burton had wells of details about Biffle’s life on and off the track. Off the track, after all, is where Biffle truly became a North Carolina hero, using his personal helicopter to deliver supplies to hard-to-reach areas of Western North Carolina that were ravaged by the deadly Hurricane Helene.

Two of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle’s race cars and a truck series truck sit outside Bojangles Coliseum on Friday during a Gathering in Remembrance in Charlotte to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included Biffle.
Two of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle’s race cars and a truck series truck sit outside Bojangles Coliseum on Friday during a Gathering in Remembrance in Charlotte to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

Jordyn Biffle, Greg’s niece, spoke of Greg but also the rest of the Biffle family including most of all Cristina, someone she considered her best friend.

The memorial concluded with a prayer, immediately preceded by a live, acoustic rendition of Carly Pearce’s “Show Me Around” — sung beautifully by Lindsay Bowman as photos of flashed on the arena’s jumbotron: of a 5-year-old Ryder smiling with a mini-fire-suit on; of Wadsworth holding a large bass he plucked from the ocean; of a high-school Emma taking prom photos with her mother.

Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle exits the stage after speaking at a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony on Friday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025, in Statesville. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle exits the stage after speaking at a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony on Friday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025, in Statesville. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

“They lived fully, loved deeply and gave freely,” Jordyn said. “Their lives remind us that what matters isn’t how long we’re here, but how we use the time we’re given, and how fiercely we love while we’re here.”

Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle speaks during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025 in Statesville, NC. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle speaks during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025 in Statesville, NC. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

Garrett Mitchell was the final speaker on the stage before the prayer and song and final goodbye. Mitchell, a famous YouTuber who goes by the name Cleetus McFarland, wouldn’t go as far to say he was Greg’s best friend; that title belonged to Wadsworth, whose “no drama,” white-bearded, pure-hearted soul accompanied Biffle everywhere, Mitchell said.

But Mitchell had stories. Unending amounts of them. They not only made him laugh and recentered his focus through a tough, 23-minute testimony — “Can I have a napkin?” he asked his wife midway through to wipe his face of tears — but they also underscored or highlighted many stories that’s been shared over the month since the tragedy.

Garrett Mitchell wipes tears from his eyes as he speaks during a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, NC on Friday, January 16, 2026. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Thursday, December 18, 2025 in Statesville, NC. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. Mitchell was a close friend of Biffles.
Garrett Mitchell wipes tears from his eyes as he speaks during Friday’s Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. The ceremony, Gathering in Remembrance was held for the seven people who died in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025, in Statesville. Among the group was former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. Mitchell was a close friend of Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

There was the story of the time Biffle — Mitchell and their friend group called him “Mr. The Biff” — invited Mitchell to his home in Lake Norman. Mitchell was flying his helicopter in, and Biffle set ablaze an acre of grass to offer Mitchell a smoke signal of where Biffle’s house was: “That was really nice of him,” Mitchell said. He then laughed: “But it was also the same spot he wanted me to land. I was like, ‘Brother, how can we land while the LZ (landing zone) is on fire?!”

There were other stories Mitchell experienced first-hand: of Biffle losing a bet and having to not wear sleeves for a whole month (he lived up to the bet even on ski slopes); of Biffle, endearingly but unfailingly, forgetting his wife’s drink every time they ventured to a bar together.

Longtime NASCAR executive Mike Helton, center, attends a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
Longtime NASCAR executive Mike Helton, center, attends a Gathering in Remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

There were also stories Mitchell shared that he’d heard from earlier in Biffle’s life. That included the story of Biffle somehow maneuvering his yellow Pontiac and performing a burnout inside the gymnasium of Camas High School in his Camas, Washington, hometown for his friends and classmates — an action that caused, understandably, an expulsion as well as his father impounding his car.

The one that might speak most about Biffle was the one Mitchell told about Biffle’s son, Ryder.

“Staying at Biff’s house meant you were going for an evening trail ride with Ryder,” Mitchell said. “He loved leading myself and all of our guys here on his dirt bike trails. And I’m honored to be one of the few people to get in a racing incident with Ryder Biffle.”

By racing, of course, Mitchell meant down a driveway that slalomed through trees.

“Actually, I think I got a little heavy on the breaks into the turn, and Ryder was a little behind on the breaks,” Mitchell continued. “But anyhow, there we were, grinding to a halt on the asphalt. Now, I’m thinking, ‘This kid is going to be crying big-time here.’ But as I looked at him, he was actually smiling, and laughing, and insisted on racing again.

“Luckily it was dark out, so I don’t think his wounds showed as he passed his mom and dad. … Ryder hid it, and we kept on racing.”

Greg Biffle's North Carolina Auto Racing Walk of Fame marker is turned in a memorial on Dec. 19, 2025, on North Main Street in Mooresville.
Greg Biffle’s North Carolina Auto Racing Walk of Fame marker is turned in a memorial on Dec. 19, 2025, on North Main Street in Mooresville. KHADEJEH NIKOUYEH Knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com

Ryder didn’t know his father had done the same thing decades earlier, in a heavy winter jacket in Fontana at Cup race — the kind of race that springboarded Biffle into the nation’s consciousness, that opened other avenues for Biffle’s support and aid during Helene, that made him who he was.

Ryder simply shared Greg’s fearlessness, his heart, his mind. And he offered Greg the simplest but most powerful compliment a son could offer a father.

Said Jordyn Biffle: “Ryder had really big dreams of being just like his dad.”

This story was originally published January 16, 2026 at 3:18 PM.

Alex Zietlow

The Charlotte Observer

Alex Zietlow writes about the Carolina Panthers and the ways in which sports intersect with life for The Charlotte Observer, where he has been a reporter since August 2022. Zietlow’s work has been honored by the Pro Football Writers Association, the N.C. and S.C. Press Associations, as well as the Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) group. He’s earned six APSE Top 10 distinctions for his coverage on a variety of topics, from billion-dollar stadium renovations to the small moments of triumph that helped a Panthers kicker defy the steepest odds in sports. Zietlow previously wrote for The Herald in Rock Hill (S.C.) from 2019-22.
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Alex Zietlow

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