NASCAR, Jim France
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NASCAR insider Jeff Gluck went over Denny Hamlin and Jim France's embrace after the antitrust trial ended on Thursday, December 11.
NASCAR Chairman Jim France remained steadfast in his refusal to change NASCAR's Charter Agreement, and team owner Richard Childress testied in the NASCAR Trial on Dec. 9.
NASCAR chairman and CEO Jim France was called as the final witness for the plaintiffs, 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, in the antitrust lawsuit the teams filed against France and the sport he owns and operates.
NASCAR chairman and CEO Jim France explains why he enforced strict parity with the introduction of the Next Gen concept in 2022.
France, the final witness called by Kessler — who represents Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, the two teams who refused to sign the latest charter deal that is at the heart of this dispute and instead decided to sue NASCAR and France — was set up to give crucial testimony in a trial that had been building to this moment.
Legal expert Shannon McMinimee claims that Jim France could be liable for damages if found guilty in the antitrust trial.