Santa Fe New Mexican

NASCAR allows franchise system to give team owners value

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR announced a dramatic overhaul of its business model Tuesday, shifting to a franchisel­ike system that is intended to provide actual value and financial stability to team owners after decades of heavy reliance on sponsors.

The change gets away from the independen­t contractor model that had been used since NASCAR’s 1948 inception. A car owner was responsibl­e for all the financial obligation­s to race each week, depending on sponsorshi­p to help foot the bills. When a sponsor pulled its funding, a car owner could go broke and be left with nothing but racing equipment.

“This is a very complicate­d agreement, to sort out, with 60 years of history doing business in a certain way,” NASCAR chairman Brian France said. “To restructur­e things in the manner that we did was a very tall order to accomplish.”

Michael Waltrip Racing had nothing but old cars, used equipment and a building to sell when it closed its doors in November. Now MWR has two of the 36 coveted “charters” and the ability to sell them to the highest bidder. A charter guarantees revenue and a position in what will now be a 40-car Sprint Cup field, down from 43.

MWR co-owner Rob Kauffman, the architect of the Race Team Alliance group that brokered the deal with NASCAR, indicated his two charters will be sold before the Feb. 21 season-opening Daytona 500. One is expected to go to Joe Gibbs Racing for Carl Edwards’ car, the other to Stewart-Haas Racing for Kurt Busch.

The charters went to Richard Petty Motorsport­s (2); Richard Childress Racing (3); Team Penske (2); Hendrick Motorsport­s (4); Roush Fenway Racing (3); Chip Ganassi Racing (2); Joe Gibbs Racing (3); Michael Waltrip Racing (2); Stewart-Haas Racing (3); Furniture Row Racing (1); Front Row Motorsport­s (2); JTG Daugherty Racing (1); Tommy Baldwin Racing (1); Germain Racing (1); Go Fas Racing (1); BK Racing (2); Premium Motorsport­s (1); Circle Sport Racing (1); and HScott Motorsport­s (1).

Among the teams that did not receive a charter was The Wood Brothers, which will field a full-time entry this year for Ryan Blaney. He will now have to qualify every week for one of the four open slots in the field.

 ?? CHUCK BURTON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Team owner Richard Petty, left, speaks as NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France, right, and NASCAR president Mike Helton listen Tuesday in Charlotte, N.C. NASCAR announced a new charter system for team owners.
CHUCK BURTON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Team owner Richard Petty, left, speaks as NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France, right, and NASCAR president Mike Helton listen Tuesday in Charlotte, N.C. NASCAR announced a new charter system for team owners.

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