At a racetrack where a casino is an integral part of the complex, Todd Bodine gambled and won big.

Despite spinning early in Friday's rain-shortened Lucas Oil 200, Bodine remained on the lead leap, and with a contrarian pit strategy, he worked his way into the lead. When rain forced NASCAR to call the race after 147 laps, Bodine was the winner, breaking a drought of 37 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races dating to 2010.

The two-time series champion won for the 22nd time in his career after fending off an assault from Parker Kligerman, the race runner-up. Polesitter Kevin Harvick, who dominated the first half of the race, was third when NASCAR called the event after a second stoppage for rain. Nelson Piquet Jr. finished fourth and Cale Gale fifth.

Bodine came to the pits on lap 98 and remained on the track when Harvick, Timothy Peters, James Buescher and series-leader Justin Lofton surrendered top-five positions by pitting for fuel before the resumption of the race after the first rain delay on lap 124.

Harvick's truck, lightning fast in clean air, tightened in traffic, and Bodine was able to hold the top spot until a second rain shower necessitated the ninth caution on lap 143. Four laps later, with no chance to dry the track before nightfall, the race was over.

Bodine credited Red Horse Racing crew chief Rick Gay with the race-winning call.

"We didn't have the best [truck Friday], but Rick made a great call," Bodine said. "I didn't realize what he was trying to accomplish, or how close we were on fuel, but it worked out. You don't like to win 'em this way, but you know what? I've lost 'em this way, so I'm going to take this one, and we're going to go to the house.

"Kevin had the best truck, but racing isn't always about having the best truck. It's about strategy and putting yourself in the right position, and Rick Gay did that for this team."

Harvick began to assert his dominance as soon as the race began. By the time the engine in Jason White's No. 23 Ford blew on lap 12, Harvick had opened a 3-second leader over hard-luck Johnny Sauter.

A contender for the series championship last year, Sauter brought his truck to pit road under the fifth caution on lap 98 because of a power-steering failure. The long stay on pit road dropped Sauter to 18th in the running order, the last truck on the lead lap.

Harvick held a comfortable lead when Wes Burton's spin and contact with the inside wall caused the sixth caution of the afternoon. Rain began to fall while the field circulated under yellow.

NASCAR brought the field to pit road on lap 121 and red-flagged the event for 15 minutes, 23 seconds, but the rain abated and provided an opportunity to restart the race on lap 124.

Pos Driver Car/Engine Laps Time/Delay
1 Todd Bodine Toyota 147 1h 48:00.
2 Parker Kligerman Dodge 147 23:12:00.
3 Kevin Harvick Jr.
Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
4 Nelson Piquet
Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
5 Cale Gale Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
6 Ty Dillon Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
7 James Buescher Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
8 Matt Crafton Toyota 147 23:12:00.
9 Timothy Peters Toyota 147 23:12:00.
10 Justin Lofton Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
11 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
12 Miguel Paludo Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
13 Brian Scott Toyota 147 23:12:00.
14 David Starr Toyota 147 23:12:00.
15 Ross Chastain Toyota 147 23:12:00.
16 John Wes Townley Toyota 147 23:12:00.
17 Paulie Harraka Ford 147 23:12:00.
18 Caleb Holman Chevrolet 147 23:12:00.
19 Jeb Burton Chevrolet 146 1 Lap
20 Dakoda Armstrong Toyota 145 2 Laps
21 Jeff Agnew Chevrolet 145 2 Laps
22 Bryan Silas Ford 145 2 Laps
23 Chris Fontaine Chevrolet 144 3 Laps
24 Johnny Sauter Toyota 143 4 Laps
25 Norm Benning Chevrolet 142 5 Laps
26 Jennifer Cobb Dodge 137 10 Laps
27 Ron Hornaday Jr. Chevrolet 136 Accident
28 Wes Burton Ford 108 Accident
29 Ryan Sieg Chevrolet 95 Accident
30 Max Gresham Chevrolet 88 Accident
31 Chris Jones Toyota 17 Overheating
32 Johnny Chapman Chevrolet 14 Ignition
33 Jason White Ford 11 Engine
34 Mike Harmon Chevrolet 3 Ignition
35 Dennis Setzer Chevrolet 2 Vibration