AVONDALE, Ariz. — For the second year in a row, NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps sat on the stage at Phoenix Raceway as media members prepared to ask questions about an ongoing lawsuit. This time, however, he addressed the situation with a prepared statement.
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Phelps directly told media members that he would not answer any questions about the court case involving 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports, and NASCAR. He just acknowledged the unsealed documents detailing previously hidden financial aspects of the sport.
This statement followed multiple updates in this court case. The unsealed documents only made up one. Judge Kenneth D. Bell also dismissed NASCAR's counterclaim against the two teams and 23XI Racing co-owner Curtis Polk as part of Summary Judgment.
NASCAR has previously filed the counterclaim alleging in part that Polk had spearheaded a "cartel" during the 2025 Charter Agreement negotiations.
"The 2025 charter agreement is an improvement on the 2016 framework with enhancements that reflect real progress for teams and the sport, including over $3 billion in guaranteed payments to the teams, enterprise value that is roughly $1.5 billion now to the race teams, guaranteed starting positions each week that allow teams to sell sponsorship on the best billboards in sports, the Next Gen car, and charters guaranteed for 14 years until at least 2039, plus an obligation to negotiate in good faith beyond that," Phelps said to start the statement.
"The bottom line here is NASCAR is committed to charters. I also want to be clear: the France family started NASCAR in 1948 using their own resources, grit and ingenuity. They have taken countless personal and financial risks, investing billions of dollars and untold hours into growing this sport to create opportunity for teams to race in front of fans for nearly eight decades.
"We are proud of what we built for fans together with the race teams, especially since the charters were introduced. As you saw in the race team declarations, the charter system is a critical part of the sport, something we created with and for the teams. We'll continue to defend and preserve it. Make no mistake, the lawsuit puts this at risk.
"We remain committed to doing what is best for the sport of stock car racing, for the race teams we partner with, the many stakeholders who engage with it, the people throughout the garage that depend on it, and of course the millions of fans that love it like we do, and just want to see more of the best racing in our history.
"Although we'd prefer this lawsuit was never brought to us, we remain confident in our case before a jury and, if necessary the Fourth Circuit (Court of Appeals). We remain optimistic that we can continue to work towards a resolution to this litigation that allows us to return our focus to racing, which is what we all want.
"We remain optimistic that we can continue to work towards a resolution to this litigation that allows us to return our focus to racing, which is what we all want," Phelps added in his statement lasting just over six minutes.
"The financials of this sport have been unsealed and made available to the court. It may sound counterintuitive, but that's not something we at NASCAR are hiding from. In fact, I encourage you to really think about what you're seeing and how it comes to life each weekend for fans, partners and race teams.
"Our goal has always been to create the best fan and partner experience in sports. We invest in that every year through our people, our tracks, the racing product and how we run the business. It's been a guiding principle for almost 80 years and four generations of France family stewardship.
"With that in mind, I'd like to highlight a few fundamental points about this litigation, the business of NASCAR. NASCAR is more than just the Cup Series. Our business includes other national series, and we support both regional and international series.
"Our sport is built on families, relationships, and trust that we earn every day. We depend on each other as partners, promoters and fan ambassadors for motorsports. Some of them accepted less to accommodate the new charter agreement, families like the Smith family, who run Speedway Motorsports, the Mattioli family at Pocono, and Roger Penske at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
"NASCAR's balance sheet has more than $1.2 billion in invested capital, meaning the vast majority of what we make is invested back into the sport, our race teams and our people. It's the core principle of how we operate and a recognition of our importance in motorsports broadly.
"Between track operations, new races, safety administration of the sport, charter payments and taxes across our multi-state operations, our role as the sanctioning body requires tremendous and often unpredictable expenses. Ensuring we have adequate funds to cover unforeseen circumstances or opportunity for expansion is critical and responsible business.
"We have significant debt payments from the ISC merger (in 2019) that transformed our business and our schedule, as well as other business-critical liabilities that ensure we can operate the sport year to year. We aren't like other sports in this regard. We have unique commitments.
"Teams receive about $1.1 billion per year from their sponsors and from NASCAR combined. In the charter negotiation, we hope to better align our collective futures around a model that facilitates mutual growth through three main ideas: increase revenue for the teams, which has happened. Agreed-upon cost structure. Costs of materials for building the cars is down about 40%, and we work with teams on a cost structure, but haven't yet come up with a formula that we agree upon. And then the Driver Ambassador Program and sending driver participation to join us in growing the sport.
"We believe our charters are fair and equitable. We did our best to support the race teams without destabilizing our sport and compromising our ability to deliver for fans well into the future.
"NASCAR is fully aligned with our race team partners who have submitted declarations hoping to end this litigation. We are trying our hardest. I am trying my hardest both as a fan as well as the commissioner of this sport that I've loved since I was 5 years old."
Phelps ended his statement saying that two of the 15 teams "seem set on an unfortunately court battle" but that he hopes everyone can agree on the quality of racing and how NASCAR cares about serving its fans.
