Judge denies preliminary injunction request by teams in antitrust case UPDATE

UPDATE 2: 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsport have officially filed an appeal of judge’s denial of their request for a preliminary injunction that would all them to run as charter teams while the lawsuit continues.

UPDATE 11-8-2024: The judge overseeing the antitrust case brought against NASCAR by 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports has denied the team’s motion that NASCAR continue to allow them to operate as chartered teams while the lawsuit is underway.

A portion of the ruling reads: “At this time, Plaintiffs have not met their burden as required for a preliminary injunction. Should circumstances change, Plaintiffs may file a renewed motion for preliminary injunction. Therefore, the Court denies Plaintiffs‘ motion without prejudice. However, the Court intends to assign this case to the fast track as defined in this Court‘s standing orders. The Court DIRECTS Defendants to file an answer by the already-established responsive pleading deadline of December 2, 2024, even if it is accompanied by a motion to dismiss. The Court also DIRECTS the parties to conduct the Initial Attorneys Conference as soon as possible after the responsive pleading is filed and to file the Rule 26(f) report no later than December 16, 2024, so that a case management order
can promptly issue”

AND: The teams’ statement:

ORIGINAL POST 11-4-2024: The judge assigned to the antitrust case filed by Front Row Motorsports and 23XI Racing against NASCAR did not make a decision during a hearing Monday on the teams’ request for a preliminary injunction.

The teams want NASCAR to allow them to continue to run as chartered cars while the case proceeds.  NASCAR says the teams did not sign the charter agreements so they need to compete as open teams.

A decision will likely be made before Friday.

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