Jordan mocks NASCAR in antitrust dispute: Trial on the horizon

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NASCAR and Teams Resume Legal Battle After Mediation Failure

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – NASCAR and two of its teams appeared in court again on Thursday, after two failed days of mediation, resuming their bitter antitrust fight. The hearing included the reaction of team owner Michael Jordan, who reacted with disbelief to some testimonies, as the two sides prepare for a trial.

“Today’s hearing confirmed the facts of NASCAR’s monopolistic practices and demonstrated what they are: vindictive bullies who prefer to focus on personal attacks and distract from the facts,” said Jeffrey Kessler, representative of the two teams. “My clients have never been more united and committed to ensuring a fair and competitive sport for all teams, partners, drivers and fans. We will go to trial to hold NASCAR accountable.”

Jeffrey Kessler
The lawsuit was filed a year ago by 23XI Racing, co-owned by Jordan and Denny Hamlin, three-time Daytona 500 winner, and Front Row Racing, owned by Bob Jenkins. These are the only two organizations out of 15 that refused to sign extensions for new charter agreements, following more than two years of negotiations. Charters are fundamental to NASCAR’s business model, as they guarantee income and access to weekly races, and without them, both teams claim they will likely cease operations. Other teams have requested an agreement to clarify the situation and move forward in the stock car series, but the three mediation sessions have apparently been unsuccessful, and the hearing revealed how distant the parties are. The trial is scheduled for December 1st. U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell and Jeffrey Mishkin, former Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the NBA, participated in mediation on Monday and Tuesday. Bell began the session by thanking both parties for working in good faith during the sessions. NASCAR seeks to have Bell dismiss the lawsuit, and the hearing focused on the series’ request to limit the scope of the damages that the two teams claim are owed to them. NASCAR accused 23XI and FRM of manipulating other teams and of behaving with “classic cartel behavior, ultimately because they received less than they would have received” under the extensions of the statutes signed at the end of last year. It struggled to defend those arguments on Thursday. NASCAR repeatedly insisted that teams are free to compete in both IndyCar and F1, without revealing that entry into F1 is nearly impossible and that IndyCar’s finances simply don’t come close to the value of competing in the stock car series. Kessler compared NASCAR’s move to IndyCar to a Major League Baseball team moving to the minor leagues.

“Experts found that the prize money and television audiences of (IndyCar) were too low to make them a minor league team,” Kessler argued. “Michael Jordan, if they put a gun to his head and told him he had to join IndyCar, it better be a pretty big gun.”

Jeffrey Kessler
NASCAR also misrepresented the sale of Chip Ganassi Racing’s NASCAR team to Trackhouse Racing before the 2021 season as an opportunity for Ganassi, whose name was repeatedly mispronounced by NASCAR’s lawyer, Christopher Yates, to reinvest in IndyCar and expand that program to four cars. Ganassi has long been running three to four cars in IndyCar and for over three decades has been considered one of the top two teams in IndyCar. Jordan laughed and smiled several times at NASCAR’s claims, and at one point, Hamlin and Jenkins vehemently shook their heads at NASCAR’s assertion that it pays its teams a higher percentage of revenue than F1 does to its teams. Jordan did not speak to reporters afterward. The original statutes lasted from 2016 to 2020 and were automatically renewed to continue until December 31, 2024. NASCAR claims they have added more than $1 billion in capital for their teams, but the owners have pushed for changes. 23XI and FRM initially won a preliminary injunction to be recognized as teams with charters this season while the case played out, but that was overturned and the combined six cars have competed as “open” teams as the season nears its end on November 2. Kessler argued that the damages in the case should date back to the 2021 season due to 28 exclusion elements that, according to him, prevent NASCAR teams from competing in any motorsport series that resembles their version of stock car racing. NASCAR conceded that there was at least one exclusion element in that charter agreement that began in 2021. Bell was scheduled to hear testimony from expert witnesses, but he scheduled two court dates in November, two weeks after Hamlin competes for the Cup Series title outside Phoenix.
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