For more than 40 years, Henderson Motorsports carried the steady hand of Charlie Henderson in NASCAR. The veteran’s passion kept the small Virginia-based team alive in NASCAR’s toughest arenas. Whether it was a part-time Truck Series schedule or flashes of underdog brilliance at superspeedways, his presence anchored every move the No. 75 made. But when Henderson passed away in June, the future of the team suddenly hung in the balance. As the garage paid tribute to his influence, attention quietly shifted to who would step forward next.

That uncertainty was heightened when the team momentarily paused competition after Henderson’s death, leaving its momentum in question. Earlier this season, Parker Kligerman had piloted the No. 75 to the front at Daytona, crossing the line first before a fa

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