23XI and FRM’s Lawsuit Injunction: What You Need to Know

DARLINGTON, SOUTH CAROLINA - SEPTEMBER 01: Michael Jordan, NBA Hall of Famer and co-owner of 23XI Racing looks on during the NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway on September 01, 2024 in Darlington, South Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

What’s Happening?

The next major step in the 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports’ lawsuit against NASCAR is a hearing for a preliminary injunction. While separate from the antitrust lawsuit itself, this injunction would be unprecedented and give the two teams a leg up in their ongoing lawsuit. Here’s what you need to know about this injunction.

Why Are These Teams Suing NASCAR?

On Oct. 2, 23XI Racing, co-owned by NBA legend Michael Jordan and driver Denny Hamlin, joined by Bob Jenkins Front Row Motorsports, sued NASCAR on antitrust grounds. This suit claimed that for multiple reasons, including NASCAR’s track ownership and ownership of the ARCA Menard Series, NASCAR operates a monopoly over stock car racing.

This suit followed the two holding out on signing the 2025 NASCAR Charter Agreement. In doing so, they risked losing their charters and the financial benefits that come with those charters. However, now that they are suing NASCAR, they hope a preliminary injunction could give them a hand in their operation next year.

What Will the Injunction Do?

When the two teams sued NASCAR, the lawsuit mentioned a planned preliminary injunction. This injunction would allow these two teams to race their four chartered entries throughout the lawsuit, with a key caveat.

This caveat would prevent NASCAR from enforcing Section 10.3 of the 2025 charter agreement. As the initial filing states on page 9:

“The 2025 Charter Agreement also includes an anticompetitive release provision that purports to require the signing team to release any legal claims it may have against NASCAR that are connected to NASCAR’s determination of whether and on what criteria to enter into a Charter Agreement.”

If NASCAR were not able to enforce this release provision, the teams could remain chartered while being able to sue NASCAR. So, if the teams don’t agree with the current Charter system, why would they want the benefits that come with it?

Why Do the Teams Want an Injunction?

Despite making it clear that they will compete full-time in 2025 no matter what, both teams would benefit tremendously from racing as chartered teams in 2025.

The NASCAR Charter system was introduced prior to the 2016 season. The 36 charters allow teams one automatic entry per charter owned in all 26 NASCAR Cup Series races. Each team is limited to owning four charters and can buy or sell as they please, given approval from NASCAR.

These charters sell for millions of dollars due to the financial benefits of ownership. For example, chartered teams earn money from both entering a race and from revenue sharing with NASCAR and its tracks.

The alternative is to race as an unchartered or “open” car. This is much more costly in the long run and does not guarantee a starting spot week in and out. However, there are currently four open spots at each race.

Since holding out on the 2025 Agreement and suing NASCAR, the two teams are at risk of losing their charters. NASCAR confirmed this in an Oct. 16th filing by stating:

“The deadline for Plaintiffs to sign 2025 Charter Agreements expired weeks ago, and NASCAR has taken steps, consistent with its contractual obligations to other Charter Teams, to plan for a season with only 32 Charters.”

This statement from NASCAR makes the upcoming hearing for this Preliminary Injunction all the more important.

Why Does NASCAR Not Want Them to Get an Injunction?

The laundry list of reasons why 23XI and FRM want this injunction makes NASCAR opposition rather clear. Giving the teams a modified version of the agreement changes what NASCAR felt was their best offer.

In their Oct. 23 response to the team’s request for a preliminary injunction, NASCAR outlined their reasonings as to why the two teams do not deserve this injunction.

The two key reasons are that the injunction “Disrupts the Status Quo” and that the two teams contradicted themselves by wanting to be chartered teams despite their constant public disagreement with the system. The disrupted status quo refers to those chartered teams that signed the 2025 NASCAR Charter Agreement. NASCAR would have to give these two teams different contractual terms from those of the others.

Per page 7 of NASCAR’s Oct. 16 response:

“NASCAR carries contractual obligations to the 13 teams that accepted its offers of 2025 Charters, and consistent with the terms of the 2025 Charters, NASCAR is working on reallocating funds that Plaintiffs would have received to increase prize money and other special awards for the 2025 season for the benefit of teams that timely executed 2025 Charters, as well as Open teams who can compete to win the increased prize money and other special awards.”

If the two teams get their injunction, NASCAR claims this would interrupt their plans to reallocate this money and their plans to field just 32 chartered teams in 2025.

Injunction Is Not Approved: Who is Affected?

Beyond the previously mentioned financial losses associated with losing their charters, the fallout will affect those outside the offices of 23XI Racing and FRM.

In a drastic turn of events, the two teams could miss seeing major names and sponsors in races. These names include current drivers Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick of 23xi and Noah Gragson and Todd Gilliland from FRM. While this is a rare event, it has happened in the past.

So how would this happen?

While most races fill their 40-car fields, Road Courses and Superspeedway races, such as the Daytona 500, often have more than enough entries. With the opening of eight more open slots, perhaps more open cars could enter these races.

Since the opening or introduction of the Charter System, these two teams have successfully entered numerous open cars in races. While it is hard to imagine, the outcome of this hearing could result in Tyler Reddick, NASCAR’s reigning regular-season champion, or Bubba Wallace, one of NASCAR’s most-known names, not being in a major race.

Furthermore, the initial lawsuit revealed that these two teams’ third charters, purchased from Stewart-Haas Racing prior to the Agreement and lawsuit, have yet to be approved by NASCAR. Zane Smith and Riley Herbst are the rumored drivers of these two cars. If the teams do not get their injunction, Smith and Herbst, along with the seller, SHR, may be affected.

When Is the Hearing?

NASCAR requested an extension to the initial hearing date due to Hurricane Milton. The NASCAR headquarters in Daytona were in the path of the storm. The court accepted this and granted NASCAR Nov. 4 as the hearing date.

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Even Magic Johnson Has Noticed Michael Jordan’s NASCAR Team Success

What’s Happening?

Magic Johnson, who faced Michael Jordan 18 times on the NBA court, including 13 regular-season games and 5 games in the 1991 NBA Finals, recently offered public praise for 23XI Racing’s rise in the 2026 NASCAR season.

The two former NBA players built their rivalry on NBA courts before competing together on the 1992 U.S. Men’s Olympic Basketball Team, known as the “Dream Team,” where the pair were known as both friends and fierce competitors. In fact, Magic Johnson played a central role in recruiting Michael Jordan and Larry Bird to join the 1992 U.S. Olympic squad.

The defining clash between Johnson and Jordan came in the 1991 NBA Finals, a season that was the shift from the Los Angeles Lakers’ “Showtime” run to the rise of the Chicago Bulls. And now, years later, Johnson turned to social media to compliment MJ’s stock car venture.

The presence of Michael Jordan in the garage has not only drawn fresh eyes to NASCAR, but also widened the sport’s reach beyond its base and placed it on platforms fans haven’t seen in years, like ESPN. The network has not held NASCAR broadcast rights since 2014, and since then, its focus has centered on properties under its umbrella, including the NBA, NFL, and WNBA. But now, even without rights, NASCAR headlines tied to MJ and 23XI Racing’s run have found space throughout their coverage.

MJ’s 23XI Racing team has opened the season with three straight wins with their No. 45 driver, Tyler Reddick. The run began with a win in the Daytona 500, the organization’s first success in that event since its launch in 2021.

Reddick followed with a win at Atlanta and then completed the sweep at the Circuit of the Americas, becoming the first driver in Cup Series history to win the opening three races of a season.

The accomplishment also placed the 23XI Racing team alongside one of the most successful organizations in NASCAR, Petty Enterprises, which last won the first three Cup races of a season in 1963.

When Reddick’s Toyota crossed the start/finish line at COTA, MJ was seen celebrating on pit road with the crew. In post-race remarks, Jordan acknowledged the pressure Reddick carried entering COTA with a chance to sweep the opening stretch. He praised the No. 45 crew and crew chief Billy Scott, and credited co-owner Denny Hamlin as the “mastermind” behind the roster build, citing Hamlin’s role in identifying Reddick’s talent and bringing him into the team.

DARLINGTON, SOUTH CAROLINA - APRIL 06: Kyle Larson, driver of the #5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, drives during the NASCAR Cup Series Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway on April 06, 2025 in Darlington, South Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

Lionel Racing Reveals First Wave of 2026 NASCAR Authentics Diecast

What’s Happening?

Lionel Racing finally confirmed the first wave of 2026 NASCAR Authentics 1:64 scale diecast for Monday morning, with the line of retail-exclusive diecast featuring a new look for the new year.

  • This line will include six throwback paint schemes from NASCAR’s 2025 throwback weekend at Darlington Raceway. Though they did not release one in 2025, this move restarts an annual tradition of Lionel releasing at least one wave of cars carrying the colors of that prior season’s throwback designs.
  • Included in this wave of cars are Austin Cindric, Kyle Larson, Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, William Byron, and Sammy Smith. Alongside these paint schemes’ debuts in the Authentics line is a new design for the packaging of the 2026 line of NASCAR Authentics.
  • Last season was somewhat turbulent for Lionel as, alongside issues with tariffs, the brand only released three waves of NASCAR Autentics, one wave of NASCAR Autentics Winners Circle diecast, and two waves of Haulers.
  • Lionel announcing the first wave of 2026 early on in the new year is perhaps a sign that 2026 could return this line to its regular release schedule. The post from Lionel Racing also confirmed that the brand will announce another wave by the end of the week, further hinting at a recommitment to the Authentics line.

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SPARTA, KY - JUNE 26: Chase Pistone, driver of the #9 NTS Motorsports Chevrolet, talks with his crew during practice for the NASCAR Camping World Series UNOH 225 at Kentucky Speedway on June 26, 2014 in Sparta, Kentucky. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)

Chase Pistone, NASCAR Trucks and Nationwide Series Driver, Passes Away

What’s Happening?

Chase Pistone, a former competitor on the short track racing circuit in addition to NASCAR’s National Series, has passed away. Pistone, now a successful Legends Car owner, was 42.

  • Chase’s brothers Nick and Tom Pistone confirmed the North Carolina natives’ passing to LegendsNation.com. The cause of Pistone’s passing is unknown. The family asked that media share the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline number, which is 988.
  • Pistone, the grandson of NASCAR legend “Tiger” Tom Pistone, made his way to NASCAR after competing on short tracks in Legends cars and Late Models. He would make his jump to NASCAR via the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in 2005, racing for Green Light Racing at Martinsville Speedway.
  • Pistone would continue his NASCAR pursuits in 2006, racing in ARCA and the NASCAR Busch Series. Unfortunately, these two starts, at Martinsville with the Busch Series and Iowa with ARCA, would be his last for nearly a decade.
  • Pistone returned to NASCAR in 2014, racing in a combined eight NASCAR Camping World Truck and Nationwide Series races. During this season, his final in NASCAR, the then 30-year-old scored his best National Series finish, ninth place in the Truck Series annual trip to Gateway.

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