logo
Fights over charters loom over NASCAR as teams, series await key court rulings

Fights over charters loom over NASCAR as teams, series await key court rulings

Associated Press20 hours ago
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — It's the summer to sue in NASCAR, the sport where the on-track bumping and banging is in danger of being overshadowed by the action in the courtroom.
Two teams -- one owned by retired NBA great Michael Jordan -- are suing NASCAR over antitrust allegations. 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports are awaiting a federal court ruling before Sunday's race in Delaware that could impact their ability to compete.
Meanwhile, seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson is battling tiny Rick Ware Racing and his lawyers at Legacy Motor Club went hard at Ware's attorneys in a Monday hearing.
What is all the fighting about? Charters, which are at the heart of NASCAR's business model. Having one is vital to a team's survival.
The legal wrangling is only making the the charters skyrocket in value. When Spire Motorsports debuted in 2019, it had bought a charter for $6 million. Now, one of Spire's founders brokered the now-disputed deal for Ware to sell one of his two charters to Legacy for $45 million.
Johnson is not enjoying the legal brawling, including the higher-profile antitrust fight. He called on those parties to settle.
'I'm just sitting back watching it all play out, learning a lot about the legal process and the amount of injunctions and appeals that can take place,' Johnson said. 'It's a big game of chess and I'm watching all the strategy that goes into it all.
'I would love to see a settlement of some kind. I really don't think that getting into a knock-down, drag-out lawsuit is good for anybody.'
The NASCAR lawsuit
23XI and FRM filed a federal antitrust suit against NASCAR last year after they were the only two organizations out of 15 to reject NASCAR's extension offer on charters.
The case has a Dec. 1 trial date, but in the meantime, the two teams are fighting to be recognized as chartered for the current season, which has 16 races left. A charter guarantees one of the 40 spots in the field each week, but also a base amount of money paid out each week.
Jordan and FRM owner Bob Jenkins won an injunction to recognize 23XI and FRM as chartered for the season, but the ruling was overturned on appeal earlier this month. Both teams were set to be stripped of a combined six charters on Wednesday, which would force them to compete as 'open cars.'
Three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin co-owns 23XI with Jordan and said they are prepared to send Tyler Reddick, Bubba Wallace and Riley Herbst to the track each week as open teams. But they still filed for a restraining order Monday and claimed that through discovery they learned NASCAR upon revocation planned to immediately begin the process of selling the six charters which would put 'plaintiffs in irreparable jeopardy of never getting their charters back and going out of business.'
NASCAR said it has asked multiple times for settlement proposals but heard nothing. NASCAR also has no intention of re-negotiating the charter agreements held by 30 other teams.
Jordan has the money to keep 23XI running without charters, but FRM doesn't have the same level of funding. Additionally, if the teams aren't chartered, they will have to qualify on speed each week to make the field.
It won't be an issue this weekend at Dover as fewer than the maximum 40 cars are entered. But should 41 cars show up anywhere this season, someone slow will be sent home.
'We're not worried because our cars have the speed. We've always said we're racing no matter what. If we have to race open, we have to race open,' Hamlin said at Sonoma Raceway last weekend. 'We worked to get an injunction and obviously feel like Dec. 1 is all that matters.'
Legacy vs. RWR
This case is actually a dispute over agreed-upon terms for Ware to sell one of his two charters to Johnson and his partners at Knighthead Capital Management.
Ware this season is leasing a charter to RFK Racing and was already under agreement with that team to get the charter back in 2026, then lease RFK its second charter next season. He never had a charter to sell for 2026 unless he ceased operations.
Yet when he signed the contract with Legacy, Ware has said, he didn't read it through and catch that the sale terms were for next season and not 2027, when he'd have both charters in his possession.
RWR is alleging Legacy pulled a bait-and-switch, and if true, it is on Ware for not seeing it in the contract he signed.
The curveball came when T.J. Puchyr, the Spire co-founder who now acts as a consultant and brokered the deal between Legacy and Ware, said last month he plans to buy Ware's team. Legacy argued in court Monday it was blindsided by the news, that if Ware is selling then the charter rightfully belongs to them, and they urgently needed depositions before Ware sold his race team out from under them.
It didn't help when Ware's lawyers couldn't answer questions about a potential sale: 'I think you need to talk to your client,' the judge told them before warning Ware may be in contempt of court and ordering depositions for later this week.
Ware, meanwhile, apparently accepted the Legacy offer for his charter despite a second bid of more than $50 million from another party. With NASCAR indicating through discovery in the 23XI/FRM suit that it has interested buyers for the six charters, it is a seller's market.
Johnson, with financial backing from Knighthead, is certain he will be getting the Ware charter one way or another to expand Legacy to three full-time Cup Series drivers.
'I'm not sure there is a plan B,' Johnson said of his confidence level at winning the case.
___
AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Big Shipper Just Reported 'Historically Low' Furniture Demand
A Big Shipper Just Reported 'Historically Low' Furniture Demand

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A Big Shipper Just Reported 'Historically Low' Furniture Demand

Key Takeaways JB Hunt Transport Services says demand for its "final mile" delivery has been depressed amid sluggish sales of furniture, appliances and other big purchases. Other furniture firms are being strained by what an upholstery firm executive called "historically low" demand for home furnishing. Consumers appear to have waited for Prime Day and other major retailers' sales to buy appliances, electronics and other big items, according to are holding off on furniture and other big—meaning both in terms of size and price—purchases, according to a big shipping company. JB Hunt Transport Services (JBHT) is seeing tepid demand for 'final mile' deliveries of large items, Chief Operating Officer Nick Hobbs said on a conference call Tuesday. Hobbs doesn't expect a shift toward big purchases any time this year, he added. Slow furniture sales are straining other companies, including luxury furniture retailer RH (RH) and Culp (CULP), a North Carolina-based upholstery firm. "Historically low" demand for home furnishing has weighed on fabric sales, CULP CEO Robert Culp IV said last month. 'The end markets in this business remain challenged with demand for big and bulky products still muted, with soft demand for furniture, exercise equipment and appliances,' Hobbs said, according to a transcript made available by AlphaSense. Furniture Business in 'A Bit of a Malaise' Americans were not undertaking renovations or buying many appliances and big-ticket items this fall because of the tight housing market, Home Depot (HD) and Lowe's (LOW) said. Sales have since picked up, although the growth may be coming from consumers trying to get ahead of tariffs, rather than shifts in underlying demand, experts have said. "Our industry has been in a bit of a malaise,' La-Z-Boy (LZB) CEO Melinda Whittington said on a conference call last month. 'But if the consumer is overall more strapped because of the broader macroeconomic trends, they will tend to stretch out their furniture purchases.' A number of consumers appear to have timed their purchase of appliances, electronics and other pricey items to coincide with major sales at Amazon (AMZN), Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT), Adobe said. Meanwhile, 'off-price retail' items have been keeping JB Hunt busy, Hobbs said Tuesday. The company reported slightly stronger second-quarter revenue than expected. Read the original article on Investopedia Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

WNBA All-Star 2025 what to watch: Team Clark vs. Team Collier, CBA negotiations and the game around the game
WNBA All-Star 2025 what to watch: Team Clark vs. Team Collier, CBA negotiations and the game around the game

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

WNBA All-Star 2025 what to watch: Team Clark vs. Team Collier, CBA negotiations and the game around the game

The 2025 WNBA All-Star rosters are set, teams are drafted and coaches are swapped. All that's left is to play the game itself. The Saturday evening showcase (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC) between Team (Caitlin) Clark and Team (Napheesa) Collier is but one piece of the All-Star weekend puzzle, a fitting cap to a packed few days of events and anticipation. There's also the skills competition, the 3-point shootout, the parties, the festivals, the light-hearted trash talk and so much more. Here's what we have our eye on this weekend: Will Clark, Ionescu light it up … from the 4-point circle? Clark used her second All-Star draft pick on Sabrina Ionescu, a fellow former No. 1 overall pick who made her name sinking deep 3-pointers in college. They have two of the longest shooting ranges in the game and are likely to light it up from deep in the offense-heavy exhibition. That's a large reason Clark said she wanted to trade coaches, bringing on Ionescu's New York leader, Sandy Brondello. There could be a twist here, should we all be so lucky. The WNBA instituted a 4-point circle in 2022 and brought it back for the 2023 game, the last to use a captain-versus-captain format. The four circles — two on each end of the court — were placed 28 feet from the rim and counted if a player made any contact with the circle while attempting a shot. The teams combined for nine of them in the first half of the 2023 contest, led by Ionescu's three. Clark is averaging a league-high five attempts per game from between 25 and 29 feet and making a league-best 1.6 per game. She's made three between 32 and 37 feet, the same as the rest of the league combined. Ionescu is fourth at 3.9 attempts and tied for second by making, on average, 1.3. She made one between 32-37, as did All-Star teammate Aliyah Boston. And Satou Sabally, whom Clark drafted from the starters pool for size, is seventh in attempts (3.0) and makes (0.9). Team Collier's bench features two of the top five players to attempt from that deep in Kelsey Plum (3.9) and Rhyne Howard (3.1). Records ready to fall A player tied or broke the All-Star Game individual scoring record each of the past three seasons. Might that trend continue? In 2022, Plum tied the record of 30 points held by Maya Moore in the 2015 game. Plum played for Team (A'ja) Wilson against Team (Breanna) Stewart. A year later, it was Jewell Loyd scoring 31 points for Team Stewart in the same battle of captains. Plum scored 30 again for a three-way tie in second. And last year, Arike Ogunbowale dropped 34 points on USA Basketball in the Olympic year game. Breanna Stewart scored 31. Understandably, then, the previous two captain-led All-Star games featured record-breaking offensive performances. Team Stewart scored 143 points in 2023, and Team Wilson scored 134 in 2024. Clark is already tied for the second-most assists in the game. She had 10 a year ago, one shy of Sue Bird's 11 in 2017. Loyd holds the record for most 3s (10), and three players are tied for most rebounds at 14. More money, more vested interest Since players now know the cash bag in advance, and there are no Olympic Games to be mindful of, we'll see star-studded fields in the 3-point and skills competitions. Sabrina Ionescu will return to the 3-point field two years after setting a single-round WNBA and NBA record. Sonia Citron, the Mystics rookie, will also participate, and was spotted practicing shooting off a rack by using Kiki Iriafen's back. Caitlin Clark will compete in her home All-Star Game, despite her shooting slump this year. Allisha Gray is the reigning champion in both skills and 3-point entering her third All-Star appearance in as many seasons. She became the first to take home prize money committed by Aflac, totaling $55,000 for each winner. The WNBA awards $2,575 to each winner as outlined in the 2020 collective bargaining agreement. Aflac increased its commitment to equal that of the NBA, per its own CBA, of $60,000 for the 3-point competition and $55,000 for skills. More than just the game Veteran players praised the last few All-Star weekends for the increase in everything else outside of the game. Brands are hosting more parties and investing in their women's basketball athletes with activations and special fan events. The WNBA focused on its WNBA Live activation, a fan fest near the arena filled with activities and games. Players make various appearances throughout the weekend. Indianapolis will be no different. The city was awarded the exhibition about a year ago, which is earlier than normal for WNBA All-Star. The airport set up a basketball court in the entryway to welcome fans, while businesses around the city are holding events and specials that will surely make their way onto social media platforms. Lynx guards Courtney Williams and Natisha Hiedeman have already pledged a 72-hour stream of their 'Stud Budz' feed that regularly entertains fans online. 'The camera ain't stopping,' Williams said ahead of the July 1 Commissioner's Cup game in Minnesota. 'We got a phone, we got a battery pack, we got a wifi box. Thank ya. Camera is staying on. If there's certain rooms that they don't want us to be in, cool. We gonna sit outside with our camera and tell the people, they won't let us in that room. Just gonna vibe. It's gonna be a movie.' And it goes beyond basketball into a cross-cultural event. Pacers Sports & Entertainment and Hartbeat, the production company founded by Kevin Hart, will host Fever Fest ahead of the All-Star Game on the other side of downtown in the White River State Park. Cedric the Entertainer, Leslie Jones, The Kid Laroi and G-Eazy will all perform. Fever guard Sydney Colson will also make her comedy set debut. Rising tensions around CBA negotiations All-Star weekend is an opportunity unlike many others to celebrate the league. The summer exhibition includes all 13 teams in some way, while a large portion of the league's best players take the court and even more make appearances around the city. (The Connecticut Sun are the only team to not have an All-Star on this year's roster.) But those upbeat vibes will have an edge this year. The players' union and league will meet on Thursday to discuss the ongoing collective bargaining agreement (CBA) negotiations. Multiple players this week said they were not happy with the movement of those talks after opting out the day after the WNBA Finals concluded in October. 'It seems slow to me where we know this is coming and this has been building for a while,' Stewart said last week. 'We officially opted out last October. For our first response back to be now is … slow.' The weekend's events are a microcosm of the arguments each side brings to the table. The league and team owners are touting the investments they've made in the league to support its growth, including larger All-Star events and team-built practice facilities. Players see the revenue coming from that investment, and the overall growth of the league, and want a piece of it. The WNBPA's leadership includes Nneka Ogwumike (president), Plum (first vice president) and Stewart, Collier and Alysha Clark (VPs). How much will Unrivaled take over the WNBA's star-studded event? Collier sent a strong message wearing an Unrivaled T-shirt while drafting her first WNBA All-Star team as captain. She even doubled down, mentioning the league she co-founded with Stewart multiple times in the broadcast while drafting every Unrivaled teammate available to her. Her All-Star team features Unrivaled Owls teammates Allisha Gray, Skylar Diggins and Courtney Williams (also of the Lynx). Unrivaled will also have an activation in Indianapolis. Collier also drafted Ogwumike to her squad by saying on the broadcast she wanted 'madam president,' a reference to her WNBPA role. The players elected Ogwumike to her third term in December 2022. She started at the helm in 2016, earned re-election in 2019 and oversaw the 2020 CBA the players opted out of last fall.

Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career
Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career

Content warning: This story contains alleged depictions of domestic violence. Former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías completed his domestic-violence suspension and will be reinstated by Major League Baseball on Thursday. Once he is officially eligible to play again, Urías, 28, will look to continue his MLB career, agent Scott Boras told Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times. 'He still has every intention to continue his career,' Boras said [in Atlanta on] Monday. 'He's getting in shape. Obviously, he'll have options that are open to him.' Boras declined to get into specifics on the options or possible deals Urías has on the table. It's believed multiple teams have checked in on Urías, per Shaikin. Any team who signs Urías will have to wait some time before he's ready to pitch in games. Urías reportedly needs to get in shape. It's unclear if he could do that in time to return to the mound this season or if he would need the entire offseason to get back into baseball shape. Urías hasn't pitched in the majors since the 2023 MLB season. He posted a 4.60 ERA over 117 1/3 innings before he was suspended under the league's domestic-violence policy that September. It marked the second time in his career Urías was suspended by the league under that policy. Urías received a 20-game suspension in 2019 after he was arrested and charged with domestic battery. Urías served that suspension and returned to the team for the 2020 season. He was on the mound when the Dodgers won the World Series later that year, throwing a scoreless 2 1/3 innings to close out the contest. He performed well for the team over the next two seasons, posting a 2.57 ERA over 360 2/3 innings and earned down-ballot Cy Young award votes in 2021 and 2022. Urías was in the midst of an injury-riddled year when he received his second suspension from MLB in 2023. Urías was arrested on suspicion of felony domestic violence after allegedly getting into a physical altercation with his wife outside BMO Stadium in Los Angeles. That charge was eventually changed to five misdemeanors. Urías pleaded no contest to one of those charges. The other four were dropped. In 2024, video emerged of the 2023 incident, which showed Urías shove his wife into a fence. Urías appeared to take a swing at his wife as the two were being separated by witnesses. Urías' contract ended after the 2023 season and he went unsigned in 2024 while the league continued to investigate the situation. In March, the league announced Urías would be suspended through the 2025 MLB All-Star break, paving the way for his expected reinstatement Thursday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store