January 22, 2025
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NASCAR Moves to Bump Michael Jordan Antitrust Lawsuit Off Track

In a new court filing, NASCAR says 23XI Racing, which Michael Jordan co-owns, is using a “meritless” antitrust lawsuit as a ploy to wrongly gain a bargaining do-over and extract “more favorable contract terms.”

NASCAR’s opposition to a motion for expedited discovery was filed on Wednesday. NASCAR aims to repel 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports’ attempt to accelerate the discovery process for their motion for a preliminary injunction.

As previously detailed, 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports have sued NASCAR and its CEO, Jim France, in a North Carolina federal court for alleged antitrust violations. The case centers on NASCAR’s use of charters, which guarantee teams a starting position in NASCAR-sanctioned races and limit their chances to compete in other circuits. As the plaintiffs tell it, NASCAR has too much control over premier stock racing series and abuses that control to suppress competition and curtail economic opportunities for stock car racing teams and potential rivals.

23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports—which didn’t sign NASCAR’s 2025 charter agreement before a deadline in September—hope U.S. District Judge Frank D. Whitney grants an injunction that would empower the plaintiffs to compete as chartered teams and restrain NASCAR from enforcing a contractual clause (Section 10.3) that releases antitrust claims.

To advance that effort, 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports seek an order that would compel NASCAR to turn over its contract provisions with independent racetracks, acquisition documents related to the International Speedway Corporation and Automobile Racing Club of America, and charter agreements that restrict teams from racing in non-NASCAR events.

In a brief authored by Tricia Wilson Magee and other attorneys from Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick and Latham & Watkins, NASCAR depicts the plaintiffs’ motion to expedite as an unjustified and unnecessary ruse. NASCAR says the motion demonstrates the plaintiffs’ “true” but unstated aim: “To use the antitrust discovery process as a weapon.”

NASCAR insists Jordan’s group wants a chance to enter into charter agreements that the group “previously rejected, and which are no longer available.”

Just as objectionable, NASCAR asserts, an injunction would effectively delete the antitrust release clause that 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports “previously accepted” and that “all other racing teams accepted in their 2025 Charter Agreements.”

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