Team Penske veteran Joey Logano has laid it all out—NASCAR’s legal drama is set to shake the sport to its core, regardless of the outcome. In a high-stakes twist, 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports escalated the charter wars to a federal courtroom after rejecting NASCAR’s take-it-or-leave-it 2025-2031 Charter deal. They claim NASCAR’s offer left no room for negotiation, pushing them to file an anti-trust lawsuit.
The lawsuit has created a massive divide in the racing community, with opinions clashing over whether this move was justified or reckless. But Logano is certain of one thing: this lawsuit is a turning point for NASCAR. “This is huge for our sport no matter what happens,” Logano stated ahead of the Talladega race. “It’s obviously big because we’ve never seen it before.”
His sentiment is echoed by his former teammate and 2012 Cup champion, Brad Keselowski. Keselowski emphasized that everyone in the garage, whether they like it or not, is part of this legal whirlwind. The entire NASCAR world now waits in anticipation to see how the lawsuit unfolds and what it means for the future of the sport.
However, while the off-track battles rage on, Logano faced his own on-track nightmares at Talladega. The two-time Cup champion had his race derailed by multiple wrecks, including a massive 28-car pileup that left him fuming. “I didn’t even have fun today,” Logano admitted. “You can’t even do anything here. You’re running four-wide, that looks cool, but you’re running half throttle, and when it’s time to go, everyone’s just stuck two-wide. There’s just not many moves you can make.”
His blunt comments expose the frustration many drivers feel about the current state of superspeedway racing. Logano now finds himself on the playoff elimination bubble, needing nothing short of a miraculous performance at the Roval to keep his championship hopes alive.
With drivers like Logano pushing for change both on and off the track, NASCAR’s future remains uncertain, and all eyes are on how the league will handle this legal and competitive crisis.