IN THE cliched language of a funeral, in the pages that follow, Wheels celebrates the 69-year life of Australian Holdens. We’re left to remember the Holden story: the great cars, the visionary people, the against-the-odds creative and manufacturing efforts, the dramas and, not least, the heroic drives across this magazine’s involvement with indigenous Holden cars. Wheels, just five years younger than Holden’s iconic 48-215, first road tested its successor, the FJ, a year after it was launched. Increasingly, especially from the 1970s, Wheels’ editors learned that a Holden cover sold magazines, just as Holden and HDT and, later, HSV appreciated that comprehensive coverage in Wheels helped sell their cars to enthusiasts. How the loss of local automotive content, specifically the performance variants, impacts car magazine sales is one of the…