SONOMA, Calif. — NASCAR avoided one public relations nightmare last week when it granted Kyle Larson a waiver to participate in the playoffs even though he missed the Coca-Cola 600. That piece of goodwill hardly made things sunshine and roses over the weekend at Sonoma Raceway, where teams remained extremely frustrated with NASCAR's slow pace at coming to a new charter agreement.
Multiple team owners told The Associated Press that NASCAR's most recent proposal — delivered almost two weeks ago — was one of the worst offers yet from the stock car series sanctioning body.
Among the complaints: The France family, which owns NASCAR as a private company, still won't budge on making the charters permanent, the series made rollbacks from previous offers and the proposal now includes a provision that would allow the France family/NASCAR to purchase charters, which are at the heart of the series' business model.
When team owners pushed back at NASCAR owning and operating race teams, they said they were sternly informed it is no different from IndyCar, which is owned by Roger Penske, who also fields three cars in that series. It also was noted that NASCAR owns the IMSA sports car series, and one of the teams is owned by chairman Jim France.
Many of the teams feel defeated and fear the showdown is headed toward a ''take it or leave it offer'' from NASCAR. Even though the teams in February voted to hire top antitrust sports attorney Jeffrey Kessler as an adviser, no movement has been made toward pursuing a case; a handful of teams seem reluctant to take any legal action.
There are currently 36 charters that guarantee entry into every race to the 15 teams that hold them. The charters expire at the end of this season and negotiations have been ongoing for several years on a new agreement. The major terms sought by teams include: Making the charters permanent, receiving 45% of traditional media revenue, receiving 33% of new revenue and a guaranteed seat at the table to give teams some governance power.
NASCAR's latest offer was for charters that are guaranteed for seven years, and an option for another seven years after that. It also included a cost cap and, in addition to the France family being allowed to buy charters, a provision in which NASCAR would allow private equity firms to buy into charters.
''I think there's still a ton of work to do. Not a little bit of work. Quite a bit. So that's going to be the priority over the next few months to get this thing a little closer," Denny Hamlin, co-owner of 23XI Racing, said after NASCAR's offer was reviewed.