KTMLew01
Team Owner
Continue to discuss?
This is a good article, written from the early testimony of NASCAR witnesses and prior to the settlement. Probst expanded his explanations on the Next Gen car, which 30 out of 36 teams voted for adopting:Statement from John Probst at NASCAR
"https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mo...TS&cvid=693bd21719dd4830b8d65d817176825e&ei=8"
>>'It's on them.' Engineer says NASCAR gave teams 'every opportunity' to cut costs
...The teams accusing NASCAR of being an unlawful monopoly have testified a lot over the last eight days that life in the Cup Series has become increasingly and unbearably expensive and that they have no option but to pay up.
On Wednesday, one of the lead engineers at NASCAR had a one-word response to such a claim:
"Bewilderment..."<<
Despite the settlement and increased revenues the teams will receive, THIS POINT REMAINS. The teams will ALWAYS operate at the ragged edge of “profitability”, because they spend every nickel on themselves, their facilities, their racing operations, in order to NOT REPORT PROFITS! It is a TAX avoidance strategy. Lavish salaries, homes, race shops, private jets, etc. What is lost in all this rah rah for NASCAR’s concessions is the BS being peddled by poor mouthing teams before and during this trial. I don’t want to hear any more of it from Hamturd, or Childress, or Hendrick, any of them. They’ve got a bigger money tree now…watch them spend it just as fast as it falls.
You assume I did not want any larger revenue distribution for teams. What I was against involved the CENTRAL CONTENTION in the lawsuit…that NASCAR used anticompetitive monospony practices to stifle competition causing damages. I still say that was NOT proven and not what happened.This is somewhat true, though overly simplified. Yes, when provided more revenue, race teams will tend to spend it in the pursuit of speed and competitive advantage.
Now explain why your preferred outcome was for the teams to receive less revenue and the France heirs to receive more, funneled into their trusts and tax avoidance schemes. Because that's all this is about at the core. The revenue streams are largely fixed. It's a matter of how the pie is divided.
If your argument is that race teams tend to spend all they have, the contrast must be that the Frances don't. If the race teams reinvest their earnings, it helps create a thriving racing industry for the employees and suppliers they are paying. If the Frances are "smarter" in their wealth building, how does that help the sport as a whole because they spend less and hoard more?
Very well said!Very well written response. There are several points I agree on. Yes, the antitrust lawsuit was a mechanism available to the teams to redress the defeat they experienced during charter negotiations. The monopoly was never going to be broken up unless the Frances decided to drive themselves right off the cliff. None of the parties wanted it to be.
I don't take offense to 23XI and FRM using antitrust to achieve their ends, because we are dealing with savvy parties who will all use every tool available to them. I also believe that NASCAR made themselves vulnerable to such a challenge by deliberately engaging in excessively anticompetitive behaviors that walked right up to the line of illegality. That's why the lawsuit was viable.
Ultimately my sympathies didn't lie with Michael Jordan or Denny Hamlin. I have a certain amount of respect for the gumption it took to mount the challenge when nobody else was willing or able, but that's it. My sympathies were with the race teams as a whole, and all of the racing people they employ. I am in favor of more equitable distribution of profits and more seats at the table when decisions are made, because the last two decades of leadership as is have been shaky at best.
The lawsuit was far from perfect and had many regrettable aspects. But in the end, it nudged things in that direction. For that I am glad.