CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — An economist testified in Michael Jordan’s federal antitrust trial against NASCAR that the racing series owes a combined $364.7 million in damages to the two teams suing it over a revenue-sharing dispute.
Motorsports
NASCAR Texas results: Joey Logano is winner, plus full leaderboard
The checkered flag is out for the NASCAR Cup Series Texas race.
Joey Logano won the WURTH 400 on May 4 at Texas Motor Speedway after starting 27th following his disqualification penalty in the last race at Talladega. This is the 37th win of Logano’s NASCAR Cup Series career.
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Austin Cindric won the opening stage of the race for his first career stage win at Texas. Kyle Larson won the second stage. The race had 12 cautions and 20 lead changes.
Here are the results from the NASCAR Texas race.
LEGEND OF L.W. WRIGHT PART 2: The long Talladega con: Could L.W. Wright drive as fast as he could talk?
L.W. WRIGHT PART 1: The long Talladega con: How L.W. Wright talked his way onto NASCAR’s fastest track
Who won NASCAR Texas race? Winner, race results for WURTH 400 Cup Series race
The unofficial full running order, results from NASCAR Cup Series WURTH 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.
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Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford
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Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
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Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford
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Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
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Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
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Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 HYAK Motorsports Chevrolet
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Austin Dillon, No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
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John Hunter Nemechek, No. 42 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
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Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
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Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
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Todd Gilliland, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford
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Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
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William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
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Riley Herbst, No. 35 23XI Racing Toyota
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Justin Haley, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
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Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
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Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
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Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford
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Cole Custer, No. 41 Haas Factory Team Ford
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Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
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Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Ford
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Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
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Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
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Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
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Austin Cindric, No. 2 Team Penske Ford
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Michael McDowell, No. 71 Front Row Motorsports Ford
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Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
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Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford
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Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
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Cody Ware, No. 51 Rick Ware Racing Ford
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Jesse Love, No. 62 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet
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Josh Berry, No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford
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Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota
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Noah Gragson, No. 4 Front Row Motorsports Ford
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Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
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AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
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Chad Finchum, No. 66 Garage 66 Ford
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Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: NASCAR Texas results: Joey Logano is winner Sunday
Motorsports
Ilott joins Wright Motorsports for full IMSA season; will dovetail IndyCar commitments
NTT Indy Car Series driver Callum Ilott will join Wright Motorsports as a full-time driver for the 2026 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.
Ilott, who raced in IndyCar with PREMA this year following earlier stops at Juncos Hollinger and Arrow McLaren, will share the No. 120 Porsche 911 GT3 R with Wright owner/driver Adam Adelson, who purchased the team from founder John Wright in April.
It will be Ilott’s first full-season campaign in sports car racing since his 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship effort with Hertz Team JOTA, in which Ilott won the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, driving one of JOTA’s privateer Porsche 963s. He drove for Wright Motorsports as a guest driver during the 2023 Indianapolis 8 Hour.
Ilott also said that his new program in IMSA will be run alongside a continued program in IndyCar. There are no clashes between the two series, outside of shared events at the Grand Prix of Long Beach and Detroit Grand Prix.
“I’m thrilled to be joining Wright Motorsports for the full season in GTD alongside my IndyCar season,” said Ilott. “Having raced with Wright Motorsports once before, I got a taste of how impressive the team is and I’m motivated to continue building on that throughout the year. It’s shaping up to be a great season ahead and I can’t wait to get to work with Adam, Elliott, Tom and the whole Wright crew.”
2025 Porsche Motorsport North America (PMNA) Selected Driver, Tom Sargent, returns to drive the five-race Michelin Endurance Cup, while Adelson’s long-time co-driver Elliott Skeer will round out the four-driver crew for the Rolex 24 At Daytona in January.
“I’m extremely excited to get the 2026 season started off with Daytona,” said Adelson, who enters his third season in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. “We have a new car in the 911 GT3 R Evo, and have been working hard in the off season to be able to extract the most of it as soon as we hit the track.
“I’m also very excited that Callum is joining the team for the full season. We’ve been good friends for quite some time and always spoke about how cool it would be to race together, and I’m glad to see that come to fruition. For the Rolex 24, we have Tom and Elliott with us, and it’s a driver lineup I know we can count on to bring home a really strong result – hopefully better than last year!”
Wright Motorsports, who won the GTD class at the 2022 Rolex 24, will be one of at least five teams entering the newest 992.2-generation Porsche 911 GT3 R for its first IMSA race at Daytona – including Manthey’s two-car, two-class program, as well as AO Racing, Mühlner Motorsports, and RS1.
Motorsports
Rick Ware Racing is switching to Chevy for the 2026 season
The NASCAR team also has a new alliance partner
Rick Ware Racing is making the switch from Ford to Chevy in 2026. It’s part of a new multi-year partnership.
They have also signed a technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing. RWR will also use engines prepared by ECR.
Cody Ware will drive the No. 51 in the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium on February 1st.
Rick Ware comments
“Chevrolet has always set a high bar with its people, its performance and its passion for racing, and partnering with them gives us the resources and support to make real progress on the racetrack,” Rick Ware, team owner stated via the release.
“Teaming up with RCR and ECR provides a foundation we can build on, not just for 2026, but for the future of our race team. We’re proud to be part of the Chevrolet family.”
“The NASCAR Cup Series is the toughest and most competitive series in motorsports, and this is an important move for the long-term growth of our company. We’ve won in NHRA, American Flat Track, World Supercross and the CARS Tour, and we want to elevate our NASCAR performance to the level of our other programs.”
GM Motorsports
“Rick and his team have shown a real commitment to growing their program, and we’re proud to support that effort alongside our partners at Richard Childress Racing and ECR Engines,” said Pat Suhy, manager, NASCAR Competition for GM Motorsports.
“Bringing RWR into the Chevrolet fold is a win for all of us. Their drive to keep improving aligns with our dedication to performance and innovation.”
Last month, Chevrolet released a new body shape for NASCAR Cup Series competition.
New NASCAR Chevy released for the 2026 season
Links
Rick Ware Racing | NASCAR | Team Chevy
Motorsports
Economist says NASCAR owes $364.7M to teams in antitrust case

Michael Jordan arrives in the Western District of North Carolina on Monday Dec 1, 2025 for the start of the antitrust trial between 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports against NASCAR, in Charlotte, N.C.
Jenna Fryer/APEdward Snyder, a professor of economics who worked in the antitrust division of the Department of Justice and has testified in more than 30 cases, including “Deflategate” involving the NFL’s New England Patriots, testified on Monday. He gave three specific reasons NASCAR is a monopoly participating in anticompetitive business practices.
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Using a complex formula applied to profits, a reduction in market revenue, and lost revenue to 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports from 2021-24, Snyder came up with his amount of damages owed. Snyder applied a 45% of revenue sharing he alleged Formula 1 gives to its teams in his calculations; Snyder found that NASCAR’s revenue-sharing model when its charter system began in 2016 gave only 25% to the teams.
The suit is about the 2025 charter agreement, which was presented to teams on a Friday in September 2024 with a same-day deadline to sign the 112-page document. The charter offer came after more than two years of bitter negotiations between NASCAR and its teams, who have called the agreement “a take-it-or-leave-it” ultimatum that they signed with “a gun to their head.”
A charter is similar to the franchise model in other sports, but in NASCAR it guarantees 36 teams spots in the 40-car field, as well as specific revenue.
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Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin for 23XI, along with Front Row Motorsports and owner Bob Jenkins, were the only two teams out of 15 to refuse the new charter agreement.
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Snyder’s evaluations found NASCAR was in fact violating antitrust laws in that the privately owned racing series controls all bargaining because “teams don’t have anywhere else to sell their services.” Snyder said NASCAR controls “the tracks, the teams and the cars.”
Snyder repeatedly cited exclusivity agreements NASCAR entered into with racetracks after the charter system began. The agreements prevent tracks that host NASCAR from holding events with rival racing series. Prior to the long-term agreements, NASCAR operated on one-year contracts with its host racetracks.
The Florida-based France family founded NASCAR in 1948 and, along with Speedway Motorsports, owns almost all the tracks on the top Cup Series schedule. Snyder’s belief is that NASCAR entered into exclusivity agreements with tracks to stave off any threats of a breakaway startup series. In doing so, he said it eliminated teams’ ability to race stock cars anywhere else, forced them to accept revenue-sharing agreements that are below market value, and damaged their overall evaluations.
Snyder did his calculations for both teams based on each having two charters — each purchased a third charter in late 2024 — and found 23XI is owed $215.8 million while Front Row is owed $148.9 million. Based on his calculations, Snyder determined NASCAR shorted 36 chartered teams $1.06 billion from 2021-24.
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Snyder noted NASCAR had $2.2 billion in assets, an equity value of $5 billion and an investment-grade credit rating — which Snyder believes positions the France family to be able to pivot and adjust to any threats of a rival series the way the PGA did in response to the LIV Golf league. The PGA, Snyder testified, “got creative” in bringing in new revenue to pay to its golfers to prevent their defections.
Snyder also testified NASCAR had $250 million in annual earnings from 2021-24 and the France family took $400 million in distributions during that period.
NASCAR contends Snyder’s estimations are wrong, that the 45% F1 model he used is not correct, and its own two experts “take serious issue” with Snyder’s findings. Defense attorney Lawrence Buterman asked Snyder his opinion on NASCAR’s upcoming expert witnesses and Snyder said they were two of the best economists in the world.
Slow pace of trial
Snyder testified for almost the entirety of Monday’s session — the sixth day of the trial — and will continue on Tuesday. The snail’s pace has agitated U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell, who heard arguments 30 minutes early Monday morning because he was annoyed that objections had been submitted at 2:55 a.m. and then 6:50 a.m.
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He needed an hour to get through the rulings, and testimony resumed 30 minutes behind schedule. When the day concluded, he asked the nine-person jury if they were willing to serve an hour longer each day the rest of the week in an effort to avoid a third full week of trial. He all said all motions must be filed by 10 p.m. each evening moving forward.
Bell wants plaintiff attorney Jeffrey Kessler to conclude his case by the end of Tuesday, but Kessler told him he still plans to call NASCAR chairman Jim France, NASCAR commissioner Steve Phelps and Hall of Fame team owner Richard Childress, who was the subject of derogatory text messages amongst NASCAR leadership and has said he’s considering legal action.
NASCAR has a list of 16 potential witnesses and Bell said he wanted the first one on the stand before Tuesday’s session concludes.
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AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
Motorsports
NASCAR Driver Logan Misuraca Set to Return to Daytona for 2026 ARCA Menards Series Opener with City Garage Motorsports
NASCAR Driver Logan Misuraca
Florida native returns to her proving ground, bringing elite drafting skill and superspeedway confidence to Daytona’s biggest stage.
— Logan Misuraca
DAYTONA BEACH, FL, UNITED STATES, December 8, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Rising NASCAR talent and Florida native Logan Misuraca is officially returning to the track where it all began, as she is set to compete in the ARCA Menards Series 200 at Daytona International Speedway to open the 2026 ARCA National Series season. Misuraca will pilot the No. 85 Orlando Health Ford Fusion with City Garage Motorsports.
A racer since just four years old, Misuraca has built her career from the ground up — from quarter midgets and karts to stock cars — through relentless determination, entirely sponsor-funded efforts, and a reputation for thriving under pressure. Unlike many drivers with family-funded backing, Misuraca continues to actively seek partnerships with brands that believe in her talent, work ethic, and long-term vision as she climbs the NASCAR ladder.
Beyond the track, Misuraca is also the founder of 1 in a Million, a mental health and motivation initiative created to support athletes and individuals facing adversity, as well as the creator of Drive Dollars, an educational platform that teaches grassroots racers how to secure sponsorships, build their brand, and create sustainable racing careers.
Daytona International Speedway holds deep personal significance for Misuraca. Through her time at NASCAR Racing Experience, where she logged daily laps at Daytona, the high banks became her training ground — shaping her race instincts, comfort in traffic, and mastery of pack racing.
“Daytona has always felt like home to me,” said Misuraca. “With my experience in the draft and at high speeds, this is the perfect place to showcase my skillset as we open the ARCA National Series season. Being a Florida local returning to my favorite race weekend of the year makes this moment even more special.”
Misuraca’s 2026 Daytona return carries added weight, as her last start at the superspeedway came in 2023, followed by seasons spent grinding to secure the sponsorship funding required to return to competition at the national level.
“To be back at Daytona in 2026 after everything it took to secure my return is incredibly meaningful,” Misuraca added. “Every race I compete in represents countless hours of outreach, pitching, and persistence behind the scenes.”
Misuraca returns to the superspeedway with gratitude and momentum as she continues to break barriers for women in motorsports.
“I’m incredibly grateful to City Garage Motorsports, Stuart, Mike, and Ryan for trusting me with this opportunity and believing in what I bring to the track,” she added. “This is bigger than just a race — it’s about representing the Female First and Girl Power initiative, building opportunities for women in the sport, and proving that we belong at the front of the field.”
Alongside Misuraca’s Daytona start, CGM will field Becca Monnopoli and Quinn Davis in the ARCA East Series in the No. 85 and No. 5, further strengthening the team’s commitment to women in racing.
“I’m so proud of Becca and Quinn and excited to watch what they accomplish this season,” Misuraca said. “Every lap they run opens doors for the next generation of girls in our sport.”
With Daytona as both her proving ground and homecoming — and with momentum building on and off the track through racing, advocacy, and education — Logan Misuraca enters 2026 ready to make a statement on one of motorsports’ biggest stages.
Stay tuned for more announcements throughout the 2026 season.
Logan Misuraca
Logan Misuraca, LLC
logan@loganmisuraca.com
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Motorsports
Lavar Scott secures full-time ride with Alpha Prime Racing
On Monday, Alpha Prime Racing confirmed that they have signed Lavar Scott for the full 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts (formerly Xfinity) Series schedule, driving the No. 45 Chevrolet.
“Don’t know what to say or type,” Scott posted on social media. “Just thank you to everyone involved. Had a dream and plan since 3 years old, and it’s actually happening. INSANE feeling.”
The 22-year-old was the championship runner-up in the ARCA Menards Series in both 2024 and 2025, and made his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut earlier this year. Both starts came with Alpha Prime, starting 22nd and finishing 28th in his Dover debut.
He improved on that result in his second start at WWT Raceway (Gateway), despite starting 36th. He marched forward, finishing 19th in a top 20 result for the team.
Along with the No. 45 utilizing various drivers, Alpha Prime also fielded the No. 44 and No. 4 entries this past year, which were driven by Brennan Poole and Parker Retzlaff. Retzlaff moved on to Viking Motorsports, but Poole will be teammates with Scott in 2026.
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Motorsports
5 Tough Takeaways from Week One of the NASCAR Trial
This lawsuit against NASCAR is serious stuff: It could dramatically change the 77-year-old sport, which is exactly what the plaintiffs in the suit are asking for.
We learned that much after week one of testimony, which wrapped up on Friday. Today, we began week two, which was supposed to be the final one, but things are moving at a snail’s pace, much to the dismay of presiding Judge Kenneth Bell. He wanted it done by the end of this week, but it seems likely to drag on, potentially past Christmas.
Bell does not want the jury to have to deliberate over Christmas, and likely neither do the jurors, so we could have a very quick decision if indeed the trial enters a third week. The trial resumed today, with testimony from an economist, and from the head of the Race Team Alliance, who testified that some teams may be interested in buying NASCAR if it is broken up by the court. To come this week as the plaintiffs conclude their presentation: NASCAR head Jim France, NASCAR commissioner Steve Phelps, and longtime team owner Richard Childress. More about him in a moment. Once those three have testified, it’s NASCAR’s turn, and they have 16 witnesses listed. Judge Bell is not a happy man.
There is no telling what the combined legal bill will be: One account said both sides have eight lawyers apiece clustered around the respective tables.

First, the lawsuit in a nutshell: As you’d likely suspect, it’s about money. Two NASCAR teams are suing NASCAR and its CEO, chairman and executive vice-president, Jim France. The two teams are 23X1 (pronounced twenty-three eleven), owned by NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin, NBA legend Michael Jordan, and Jordan’s financial agent of 35 years, Curtis Polk; and Front Row Motorsports, owned by Bob Jenkins, who reportedly owns about 250 fast-food franchises, including the likes of Taco Bell, KFC, Long John Silver’s, and A&W.
23X1’s three drivers are Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, and Riley Herbst (owner-driver Denny Hamlin still competes for Joe Gibbs Racing). Front Row’s three NASCAR Cup drivers are Zane Smith, Noah Gragson, and Todd Gilliland.
The 23IX and Front Row teams insist that given NASCAR’s current business model, it is difficult, if not impossible, to make money.

The suit claims that NASCAR is a monopoly (which the court has already confirmed), possibly in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890. The two teams also do not like the current charter agreement, which runs through 2031, and must be renewed by NASCAR every seven years. 23XI and Front Row refused to sign that charter agreement last year, though all the other teams did sign. Those two teams want the charters to be awarded permanently, and not be subject to renewal.
The 36 charters, which were awarded to NASCAR’s top teams for free in 2016, were designed to give the teams some equity that would grow in value over the years (big teams have more than one charter, up to four). The charter also guarantees those teams a set minimum income from NASCAR, but most importantly, guarantees that a chartered driver doesn’t have to qualify his or her way into the field—they get a guaranteed starting spot, allowing teams to sell sponsorship based on making every race. There are 36 chartered drivers in the field of 40 cars, with four spots held for “open” teams that don’t have charters, and must qualify their way into the race, assuming that there are more than four open teams that want to race (which lately happens with big races, like the Daytona 500).
The charters, which can be bought and sold, with the selling team keeping the money, have grown in value to about $40 million currently. If a brand-new team wants to enter NASCAR at a high level, it would have to buy a charter from a team that is either downsizing or leaving the sport. And if a team has, say, two charters and wants three so they can add a new driver, they’d also be customers for another team’s charter.
The suit also wants NASCAR to pay the teams more money from the current seven-year, $7.7 billion broadcast contract. There’s more, but you get the gist.

This first week of the 23XI and Front Row vs. NASCAR and Jim France had plenty of moments that ranged from outrageous to amusing to just bizarre. Here are some highlights:
Texts NASCAR and the teams wish they could take back.
In discovery, both sides had to supply hitherto private communications that were beyond embarrassing—they possibly mean the end of friendships, and damage to professional relationships that are beyond repair, and could even put careers into question. The most remarkable ones were from Steve Phelps, NASCAR commissioner, and Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR president.
Certainly, the most damaging one comes from Phelps, and involves his reaction to a meeting with NASCAR, and a radio interview done by former driver and current team owner Richard Childress, whose Richard Childress Racing dates back to 1969, and for whom Dale Earnhardt raced for the balance of his career.
“Total ass-clown,” Phelps texted another NASCAR executive. “Childress is an idiot. If they don’t like the state of the sport, sell your charter and get out.”
And, “If he’s that angry (and apparently he is) sign your charter extension and sell. He’s not smart, is a dinosaur, and a malcontent. He’s worth a couple hundred million dollars—every dollar associated with NASCAR in some fashion.”
And the worst of all: “Childress needs to be taken out back and flogged. He’s a stupid redneck who owes his entire fortune to NASCAR.” Late last week, Childress, 80, said he is considering legal action over the texts.
O’Donnell, commenting on a charter proposal that he believed would send the sport backwards: “(Expletive) the teams, dictatorship, motorsport, redneck, southern, tiny sport.”
And on the other side of the aisle, Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin and another company executive likely wish they hadn’t sent some texts about NASCAR bosses, and fellow team owners. Steve Lauletta, 23IX president, texted what it might take for teams to get more favorable charter deals: “Jim dying is probably the answer.” He’s referring to Jim France, the 81-year-old head of NASCAR, and the son of “Big Bill” France, who founded NASCAR in 1948. To that, Hamlin replied, “My despise for the France family runs deep.”

Jordan’s texts were also scrutinized, with one standing out from the others. To quote CBS Sports: “Jordan was shown to have called Joe Gibbs Racing ‘f—ers’ for signing the charter agreement, while referring to others who agreed to NASCAR’s terms as ‘p—–s’ in a September 2024 text with business partner Curtis Polk.”
Paranoia? To say the least.
In 2021, three-time NASCAR Cup champion Tony Stewart and former Cup crew chief and team owner Ray Evernham, who led driver Jeff Gordon to three championships, partnered to create Superstar Racing Experience (SRX). The series was modeled after the long-gone International Race of Champions (IROC) that gave Evernham one of his first jobs in the sport. SRX, like IROC, would put drivers from various racing series in identical cars, such as having NASCAR stars race against IndyCar stars and IMSA sports car stars.
Unlike IROC, though, SRX would be run as a made-for-TV series, airing Saturday nights on CBS for six weeks, beginning in June of 2021 and 2022. For the third and final season, the racing was on ESPN, on Thursday nights. Evernham designed the cars, which were capable of running on both asphalt or dirt tracks, while Stewart raced in the series and was the face of SRX. The series competed on short dirt or paved ovals that did not host NASCAR races, such as the Stewart-owned Eldora Speedway, Berlin Raceway, Five Flags Speedway, Knoxville Raceway, and South Boston Speedway.

In the three six-race seasons, 46 drivers competed, seven of them active NASCAR Cup drivers—the rest ranged from late-model legends like Scott Bloomquist and Bubba Pollard, drag racers like Ron Capps and Antron Brown, IndyCar drivers like Helio Castroneves and Josef Newgarden, and sports-car drivers like Willy T. Ribbs and Ernie Francis, Jr.
I watched the SRX races and attended the season finale at the Nashville Fairgrounds in 2021. SRX was a fun series, but by the third season, it was sagging; Evernham left, and Stewart seemed bored.
But still, somehow, NASCAR executives Phelps and O’Donnell saw SRX as an immediate threat that needed to be extinguished. Why? Because it kind of looked like NASCAR (it didn’t), and drivers like Chase Elliott and Denny Hamlin decided to participate periodically.
O’Donnell sent a text to Phelps that said: “Enough. We need legal to take a shot at this.”
Phelps said, “These guys are just plain stupid. Need to put a knife in this trash series.”
O’Donnell later texted: “Thisnis [sic] exhibit ‘a’ that nobody gives a s— about what got them their careers. Pay ‘em some money and they are all in… Lots to get our arms around but sadly any ‘goodwill’ seems to be lost. So smiles all around but behind the scenes we scheme and we win.”
Phelps: “The SRX thing is just baffling to me. Why don’t they get it – oh, they do get it and it’s a huge FU to us.”
NASCAR, though, has no problem with its stars appearing in a variety of other series and races, ranging from the CARS Tour to today’s Snowball Derby at Five Flags Speedway in Pensacola, Florida, which NASCAR helped publicize. As for SRX, it died a natural death; all 18 cars and the equipment were acquired last September by GMS Race Cars, which will use them mostly for track days and specialty events.
Everybody’s scared of Curtis Polk

As we’ve mentioned, Curtis Polk, 66, is Michael Jordan’s agent, business partner, and financial guru. His only real experience with motorsports was racing slot cars as a kid, but when Jordan and Hamlin decided to start 23IX, Polk spearheaded the investment, aiming that spear right at NASCAR.
Steve O’Donnell said that Polk, in charter negotiations, was responsible for “the most difficult meetings I’ve had with an individual in my 30 years in NASCAR.” Polk, he said, “did not have an appreciation for the sport. He was a businessman who said he could leave anytime. He threatened to kick me out of my own meeting; (I) knew he wasn’t coming from a place of respect.”
Heather Gibbs deliberately tugs at our heartstrings
Joe Gibbs had been a very successful NFL coach, and in 1992, he wanted to try something new. Along with his two sons, J.D. and Coy, he founded Joe Gibbs Racing, competing in NASCAR, plus stints in NHRA drag racing and motocross. At 85, Coach Gibbs is arguably the most beloved, most admired man in the sport.
Likely some of this will be familiar to you: J.D. Gibbs died in 2019, at age 49, after a rough four-year battle with a degenerative neurological disease. He had been president of JGR, running the day-to-day operation. Coy then assumed more duties at JGR where he was chief operating officer, and was responsible for the successful AMA motocross program.
On November 6, 2022, Coy’s son, current JGR NASCAR Cup driver Ty Gibbs, won the NASCAR Xfinity series championship at Phoenix Raceway. The family celebrated, after which Coy, also 49, and wife Heather went to bed.

The next morning, Heather said last week as part of her testimony, “My husband didn’t wake up.” The cause of his death has not been revealed.
But the tragedy made Heather Gibbs a part-owner of Joe Gibbs Racing, and she moved from her job as a real estate agent to an executive role at JGR: Her LinkedIn profile doesn’t list a title beyond saying she is a co-owner of JGR, providing “strategic advice and support to the entire management team.”
By all accounts, her testimony on Friday was the most impactful of the week, including Michael Jordan’s time on the witness stand.
She testified about a letter she wrote to NASCAR management after Steve Phelps characterized team spending as “reckless,” and a main reason why Cup teams find it hard to turn a profit. It was an extremely well-written letter, not surprising since she has a journalism degree. “The primary issue for the teams is that there is not enough revenue shared to keep the doors open. Sadly, 11 teams have closed since 2016… Please understand that when you say no to permanent charters, you are disregarding 32 years of dedication and commitment that Joe Gibbs Racing has given to your family.”
It was emotional testimony, and she hit every talking point when she spoke about why JGR signed the latest charter agreement against everyone’s better judgment. The final draft arrived late, and they were given a very short deadline to sign it. “Everything’s going so fast,” she said.
“That’s the legacy of Coy. That’s the legacy of J.D. If we don’t take the payout they are offering, we can’t keep going… It’s like you have a gun to your head. If you don’t sign it, everything is gone.”

Heather said Joe Gibbs called Jim France. She said Coach Gibbs pleaded with France, saying, “Don’t do this to us.”
France allegedly responded that he didn’t care how many of the 36 existing charters were renewed: “If I wake up and I have 20 charters, I have 20. If I have 30, I have 30.”
Yes, her testimony may not contribute a lot to the lawsuit’s technical points, but remember: This is a jury trial, and almost certainly—after a week of brash, contentious back-and-forth—it resonated with the jury.
What is it Albert Einstein said about people doing the same thing over and over, and expecting different results?
Bob Jenkins, sole owner of Front Row Motorsports since 2005, did not paint a particularly sympathetic self-portrait during his time on the stand. Front Row is a plucky, low-budget team that sometimes punches above its weight, especially on the bigger tracks. Drivers have been typically talented, but never superstars, with some bringing sponsorship or cash to drive one of Front Row’s cars. The team’s proudest moment was when Michael McDowell steered around a last-lap crash to win the 2021 Daytona 500.

He testified that his team was “very hurt” by NASCAR’s delivery of the 112-page charter agreement at 6 p.m. one night, along with the demand that it be signed by midnight. “Not a single owner said, ‘I was happy to sign it.’ Not a single one.” Still, 13 of the 15 team owners signed it.
That said, Jenkins testified that he has lost $100 million since he assumed full control of Front Row, which long predates the charter system. He has never turned a profit, and loses an average of $6.8 million per year.
So why does he insist on running a NASCAR team? “That sounds like something my wife would say,” Jenkins said.
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