Retired basketball superstar Michael Jordan appeared in Charlotte, NC federal court on Monday after he and two of his fellow NASCAR team owners filed suit against the auto racing association for alleged antitrust violations.
Jordan, who co-owns 23XI Racing alongside three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, sat in the front row of the gallery and listened intently as antitrust lawyer Jeffrey Kessler asked for a temporary injunction that would allow the former Bulls star’s team to compete in races while challenging NASCAR’s business model.
Jordan’s team 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, which is owned by restaurant entrepreneur Bob Jenkins, filed suit against NASCAR and chairman Jim France last month after months of tense negotiations over NASCAR’s charter system.
The two teams say NASCAR gave all Cup Series teams a last-minute, take-it-or-leave-it offer in September that both 23XI and Front Row refused to sign.
The owners contend the charter system limits competition by unfairly binding teams to the series, its tracks and its suppliers, and they called the France family and NASCAR “monopolistic bullies.”