NASCAR, Bob Jenkins and Front Row Motorsports
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Front Row Motorsports owner Bob Jenkins ‘hurt’ by NASCAR's ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ charter offer
Jenkins testified Wednesday that NASCAR's offer for a new charter agreement came with a deadline of mere hours to sign the 112-page document.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The attorney for the two teams suing NASCAR portrayed series chairman Jim France as “a brick wall” in negotiations over the new revenue-sharing model that has triggered the Michael Jordan-backed federal antitrust case against the top form of motorsports in the United States.
Front Row Motorsports Team Owner Bob Jenkins gave emotional testimony during the third day of the NASCAR Anti-Trust Trial in Federal Court in Charlotte, North Carolina.
After Denny Hamlin, co-owner of 23XI Racing with Michael Jordan, took the stand for the first two days of testimony in 23XI and Front Row Motorsports' antitrust lawsuit against NASCAR, it was co-plaintiff Bob Jenkins' turn to take the stand Wednesday in Charlotte.
Jenkins, the Front Row Motorsports owner, and NASCAR VP Scott Prime, architect of the sport's charter system, were on the stand Wednesday.
With the trial in Charlotte, North Carolina, now in its third day, Front Row Motorsports owner Bob Jenkins revealed some shocking facts about his team’s tenure in the NASCAR Cup Series.
Front Row Motorsports owner Bob Jenkins testified yesterday in the federal antitrust case against NASCAR that he was “honestly very hurt” by a “take-it-or-leave-it” offer on a new charter agreement.