Truckin’ Thursdays: Charlie Henderson & NASCAR’s 2nd-Oldest Team Found Home in Trucks
Charlie Henderson may be gone, but the impact his team has had on the Truck Series will continue even after his death.
Charlie Henderson may be gone, but the impact his team has had on the Truck Series will continue even after his death.
Unlike last week at North Wilkesboro, it was going to be hard for anybody to run with (or through) Heim for the victory in NASCAR’s backyard.
Byrd will run most of the season in the No. 02, while Parsons will run an undetermined schedule in the No. 20.
After several weeks of little to no big news, the Truck Series exploded with expected and unexpected news this week.
There’s a rising lack of respect in NASCAR this season. Surprisingly, it hasn’t come from the Truck Series.
Eckes became the first driver since 2012 to lead every lap of a race, while Layne Riggs got a rare penalty that calls its use into question.
Eckes became just the second driver in Truck Series history to lead all of the laps on his way to victory lane.
The stats show that Kyle Busch dominated the truck race at Texas, but the other drivers made him work for the win.
Only 33 trucks are entered for Atlanta, compared to 40 at Daytona. Why such a small field?