Denny Hamlin breaks down in tears
Digest more
The March of Dimes recognized NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps with the Corporate Leadership Award in New York City.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A top NASCAR executive returns to the stand Wednesday for a second day of testimony in the explosive antitrust case that accuses the top motorsports series in the United States of being a monopolistic bully in violation of federal antitrust laws.
NASCAR’s attorneys began cross-examining Jenkins before court broke for the day, but did not complete their questioning. NASCAR will resume cross-examination Thursday. Hearings start at 9 a.m. and end around 5 p.m. each day.
The NBA hall-of-famer, who co-owns a Nascar team and argues the company is making it hard to turn a profit, attended the first day of the trial.
Testimony revealed the sanctioning body prepared contingency plans in case Cup teams walked away and formed a rival series.
After a year since 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports filed a federal lawsuit against NASCAR and its chairman, Jim France. The parties go to court:
"They will sign them, but we are (screwed) moving forward." More on this, plus some interesting disclosures involving Cup star Denny Hamlin.
Here is a live updates page for the antitrust lawsuit happening between NASCAR, Front Row Motorsports, and Michael Jordan's 23XI Racing.