See anything in there about who runs NASCAR? Yet you insist that's what the suit is about. If you can find NASCAR ownership implied in there, I can find charters.Anti-trust issues.
1. Teams cannot race elsewhere
2. Teams cannot choose their own race car parts and suppliers
3. Tracks cannot hold other similar race events
4. NASCAR purchased competing race tracks (ISC) and race series (ARCA)
I know it is a stretch for ya. I have pointed it out numerous times, it requires looking farther in front of one's nose.See anything in there about who runs NASCAR? Yet you insist that's what the suit is about. If you can find NASCAR ownership implied in there, I can find charters.
I post because the charter ownership interests me. NASCAR ownership doesn't interest me because it isn't going to change.
No. Not comparable to stick and ball. Keep paddling.as compared to greedy stick and ball billionaires who know little if nothing about the sport of auto racing that couldn't make a go of a stick and ball team that was something that they knew about lol. Good point.
I don't remember much empathy for the family when Brian was in charge. The disdain was almost universal.There isn't anything magical that this set of heirs possess. Their decision making is quite rightly open to question.
Right. What they are seeking isn't a destruction of the monopoly because destroying it makes it impossible to generate millions in revenue from it. What they are seeking is a fairer monopoly. Threatening us as fans that something bad would happen if NASCAR had to negotiate with other series more openly and transparently about dates is hilarious: I'm an Indycar fan more than NASCAR and have been that was since I was a tyke. Do you think I like the current situation where NASCAR just tells Roger to pound sand if he wants dates more than a situation where they have to act fairly? It would absolutely amuse me to see the NASCAR finances dragged out in discovery so we can see just how much promotional muscle they put behind stuff that isn't theirs.IF the teams win their suit on the points they are suing for an unfair monopoly.
The high point of my morning on the Internet. Thanks!NASCAR Pravda.
There might be something to all that, yeah.Oh, I see now, you guys were there for the two years of negotiations, write the longest posts and claim to predict the future with certainty so your ideas must be correct. Got it.
Like looking beyond the black and white of the lawsuit text. The teams aren't interested in winning the suit. They're using the suit as leverage for charter ownership.I have pointed it out numerous times, it requires looking farther in front of one's nose.
Why would they be interested in doing either of those things? There's no other series to race these cars in. There wouldn't be anyone else to race against. The other teams aren't going to abandon the most profitable racing series in North America, especially those that have paid millions for charters in the last few years. Owners in Xfinity, ARCA, CARS, etc. aren't going to step up; if they could afford to field one of these cars, they'd be filling out those open Cup positions that go empty every week.IF the teams win their suit on the points they are suing for an unfair monopoly.
#1 The teams would be enabled to take the car and race it anywhere they choose.
...
#3. They can hold similar race events WITH the car.
Okay, ya got me there. When the teams get charter control in the out-of-court settlement, we'll see if they'll think this is worth haggling over or take what they've gained and call it quits.#2. They can buy any part they choose from anybody that can make the part that they need.
Oh man, if I thought I knew what you thought you knew.There might be something to all that, yeah.
In order to take NASCAR to court for antitrust violations, you have to suffer some sort of damages (or be a federal law enforcement agency). None of the people telling me that I want NASCAR to be parted out is capable of telling me what FRM and 23XI are claiming for damages for the court to correct that matches the notion they want NASCAR dismantled for a good reason. It doesn't exist.What would 23XI and FRM gain by starting another series with this car? Nothing. That's why this suit isn't about the written claims and the judge will never have to pass judgement. It's about control of the charters.
Buddy: what if, big If here, we do know? Better yet: if we are right and become more demonstratively right, what does that make your posts read like?Oh man, if I thought I knew what you thought you knew.
As the mods continue to butt in, let me rephrase what I said. You have mistaken me for someone that cares. Lets see if that gets past the mods tender ears lol. I think you will find as this continues to twist and turn that none of us will have this exactly right, but of course there will be those who will claim that they are. That is the way it goes.Buddy: what if, big If here, we do know? Better yet: if we are right and become more demonstratively right, what does that make your posts read like?
Just like this place.The first four minutes are a decent summary. After that, it's a lot of 'ifs' and 'coulds' and 'mights' and 'maybes'.
I'm not familiar with 'NASCAR Offtrack'. I notice no individuals claim credit for the content. I don't yet have enough experience to say if or how much of the content is AI-generated. I don't recall it saying anything we don't already know.Just like this place.
Until this is resolved, I don't think Kelley would touch one if it was delivered to the doorstep with a dozen Krispy-Kremes.I wonder if NASCAR will ever find a way to get Junior and Kelley a couple of low or no-cost charters?
I didn't watch. Pretty sure it's a waste of time. I'm just waiting till Dec 2025 for the straight dope. (what ya wanna bet gets settled before that out-of-court?)I'm not familiar with 'NASCAR Offtrack'. I notice no individuals claim credit for the content. I don't yet have enough experience to say if or how much of the content is AI-generated. I don't recall it saying anything we don't already know.
That is as good of a guess as any.I didn't watch. Pretty sure it's a waste of time. I'm just waiting till Dec 2025 for the straight dope. (what ya wanna bet gets settled before that out-of-court?)
The talk of NASCAR being "gutted" and "taken down" strikes me as overwrought hysteria. The team owners (all of them) may come out of this with permanent charter ownership - an actual asset not borrowed at NASCAR's whim. They maybe just maybe will gain other nominal concessions (revenue, veto power over certain decisions, etc.). These are deserved.
What is radical about the team owning a charter?So, following your logic, this sets up team owners able to gain significant power, even to enhance and enlarge that power based upon their own wealth and positioning within the sport. Continuing that “new deserved reality”, we would then see the evolution of SUPERTEAMS that dominate competition due to wealth investment. Before you say “that wouldn’t happen”….think again. What you are describing opens up a dangerous path for the sport. Mega rich owners buying their way to wins, superior performance. Lastly, the cheerleading is fine, cheer on your side all you or anyone wants. But do not deceive yourselves; this suit does have the potential to gut NASCAR and the structure of the sport as we know it. Do not discount that danger of radical change…it opens a big door down a new rabbit hole.
Some don't want to consider that I realize, but if this evil "monopoly" is disbanded or seriously weakened, anything is possible. I have a really hard time believing that this is just about owning charters. Terms like "intellectual property" are being thrown around and that can pertain to just about anything.So, following your logic, this sets up team owners able to gain significant power, even to enhance and enlarge that power based upon their own wealth and positioning within the sport. Continuing that “new deserved reality”, we would then see the evolution of SUPERTEAMS that dominate competition due to wealth investment. Before you say “that wouldn’t happen”….think again. What you are describing opens up a dangerous path for the sport. Mega rich owners buying their way to wins, superior performance. Lastly, the cheerleading is fine, cheer on your side all you or anyone wants. But do not deceive yourselves; this suit does have the potential to gut NASCAR and the structure of the sport as we know it. Do not discount that danger of radical change…it opens a big door down a new rabbit hole.
It's 2024, not 1994. How is this a legitimate concern? It happened already! Years ago! I was a minor when Roush had two R&D cars on track every single week and I'm in my 40s now.Continuing that “new deserved reality”, we would then see the evolution of SUPERTEAMS that dominate competition due to wealth investment.
Just make up some word salad and it'll probably be at least adjacent to what the guy who doesn't care but also thinks this is an existential threat to his identity believes. Let me try: the lawsuit isn't about the charters like this threat title and all the discourse suggests, but is actually because Elon Musk wants to fire the Earnhardt Death Car into the sun in the hopes they can obliterate his soul (trapped in the roll cage) and raise the dead.What is radical about the team owning a charter?
Still too soon, man.Just make up some word salad and it'll probably be at least adjacent to what the guy who doesn't care but also thinks this is an existential threat to his identity believes. Let me try: the lawsuit isn't about the charters like this threat title and all the discourse suggests, but is actually because Elon Musk wants to fire the Earnhardt Death Car into the sun in the hopes they can obliterate his soul (trapped in the roll cage) and raise the dead.
Okay, why? I'm back to asking why 23FRM would want to actually win this case. I understand what winning would ALLOW them to do, but why would they want to do those things? If they're not going to do them, what's left for this all to be about except charters?I have a really hard time believing that this is just about owning charters.
It’s Judge Kenneth D. Bell’s case. Temporary detours to this or that courts of appeal are just that.Got one judge that said one thing and another judge that says another and it is going to get kicked to a higher court with guess what another different judge. Oh the drama.
One of the members of NASCAR’s legal team previously articled for Whitney. Recusal by the judge is the route usually taken under those circumstances. Whitney didn’t do that and was subsequently removed from the case.U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Bell was assigned on to the case this month after the prior judge overseeing the case, Frank Whitney, was re-assigned without explanation.
Good guess, could be this also. Judge Whitney had some history with Michael Jordan, the co-owner of 23XI. Whitney was a prosecutor in the Slim Boulder cast in 1992, and Jordan was called as a defense witness in the case. Jordan’s testimony was less than nine minutes.One of the members of NASCAR’s legal team previously articled for Whitney. Recusal by the judge is the route usually taken under those circumstances. Whitney didn’t do that and was subsequently removed from the case.
Here is an answer that is simple enough to grasp. See: wanting to race the car anywhere, on Nascar tracks using anybodies parts(intellectual property), on and on.Okay, why? I'm back to asking why 23FRM would want to actually win this case. I understand what winning would ALLOW them to do, but why would they want to do those things? If they're not going to do them, what's left for this all to be about except charters?
Thanks.