Sports
Kyle Busch Sounds Alarm as He Analyzes NASCAR: ‘Other Sports Are Healthy’
As a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion. Kyle Busch has brought attention to the ongoing antitrust lawsuit filed by 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports against NASCAR and its CEO, Jim France. This legal action, filed in North Carolina’s federal court, alleges that NASCAR has unlawfully monopolized premier stock car racing to financially benefit at the expense of racing teams. Busch has now sounded the alarm.
23XI Racing, co-owned by Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin, alongside Front Row Motorsports led by Bob Jenkins, stands at the forefront of this dispute. The lawsuit claims that NASCAR has engaged in anti-competitive practices, including acquiring a majority of premier racetracks and the Automobile Racing Club of America, known as ARCA, the only notable stock car racing series competitor.
These actions, coupled with exclusivity deals, allegedly stifle competition. In response, the teams have requested a preliminary injunction to allow them to compete under a 2025 charter agreement while the lawsuit unfolds. Without signing the charter, there’s a threat that NASCAR could create conditions to exclude them from racing.
NASCAR’s charter system was introduced in 2016. Intended to provide teams with stability by ensuring entry into races, the arrangement imposed financial constraints.
Kyle Busch has commented on what’s going on, bringing focus to his move from Joe Gibbs Racing to Richard Childress Racing after his longtime sponsor, M&M’s, withdrew.
“I was sort of the catalyst to this process of what’s going on in the charter agreements.”
NASCAR’s revenue structure and its impact on team viability have been significant points of contention. Presently, NASCAR generates around $3 billion annually, of which only $400 million is directed to the teams. This stands in stark contrast to other major sports leagues where teams and athletes receive a much larger proportion of the revenue. Busch continued:
“Other sports are healthy. They’re a lot healthier than ours.”
At the heart of the lawsuit is the charge of monopolistic practices employed by NASCAR, such as controlling the supply of Next Gen parts and cars while preventing participation in other stock racing events. This monopolization is seen as limiting the growth and competitive balance within the sport, and as a means to benefit NASCAR financially. The implications of these practices have prompted calls for a reevaluation of how revenue is distributed, much like what other sports leagues have achieved in terms of fairness and increased team profitability.
For NASCAR teams, the potential expiration of charters at the end of the year looms large over current negotiations. Race teams are campaigning for fundamental changes like permanent charters and increased TV revenue shares. The plight of Front Row Motorsports, which has yet to turn a profit in its two decades within NASCAR, proves that there financial difficulties within the sport.
“NASCAR is a great family sport, and we have these opportunities of supporting one another at a lot of times and through a lot of good and a lot of bad. But as most families do, sometimes they fight,” Busch ended.