Santa Fe New Mexican

NASCAR drivers steer clear of sale

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KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Kevin Harvick has spent more than two decades racing in NASCAR series, winning a championsh­ip at its highest level and spending the better part of a decade owning an Xfinity and Truck Series team.

That makes him uniquely positioned to discuss any potential sale of NASCAR.

Yet when the driver of the No. 4 Chevrolet for Stewart-Haas Racing showed up at Kansas Speedway on Friday, fresh off his fourth victory in the first 10 races this season, about the last thing he wanted to talk about was a report that the France family was exploring the sale of the struggling series.

“Today it’s really about racing for me, and trying to focus on what I need to do,” Harvick said. “If I knew the specifics of it, and even whether it’s true, it would be easier to give you my opinion.” Well, turns out Harvick has plenty of opinions about it. He spent time during his SiriusXM radio show Happy Hours this week discussing the potential sale, pointing out the possibilit­y for “downsizing and efficiency” that would save money on overhead. He mused about whether track ownership would be included. Whether a private equity group would take over in the same mold of Formula One, or whether a technology giant could acquire the series to bolster its portfolio. And whether the very structure of ownership would change.

“Is it somebody that comes in and says, ‘OK, we’re going to structure it like an actual league where everybody’s kind of sharing in the TV revenue more evenly?’ ” Harvick asked. “So that they’re not so dependent on sponsors? So that these team owners can have real franchises that are worth value that other people want to come in to buy? I think there’s some real opportunit­ies you could talk about.”

Harvick did acknowledg­e before practice Friday that a potential sale, which was first reported by Reuters, could uniquely prop up a sport that’s been struggling with attendance and TV ratings.

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