Brad Keselowski Admits He Was Wrong By Turning Down This Magnificent Deal

Brad Keselowski Admits He Was Wrong By Turning Down This Magnificent Deal.

The charter system was introduced by NASCAR to provide value to the teams through revenue sharing. The intentions, though being noble, the outcome of the charter proposal is fraught with allegations.

However, as far as the financial incentives of the charter are concerned, many teams do not find it sustainable. However, even with ongoing discussions, not much has changed, putting the organization and team owners at loggerheads.

So naturally, the new charter proposal issued by NASCAR on Tuesday to all the teams didn’t quite receive a warm welcome.

Though the specifics of the new proposal are yet to be revealed, the main qualm around the charter agreement has always been related to revenue sharing.

So far, tracks receive 65% of the total revenue, NASCAR 10%, and the teams are left with 25% under the media rights deal. Consequently, sponsorships account for approximately 60-80% of their entire earnings.

Present team owners are insisting on receiving higher profit percentages from this endeavor. This brings us back to the most important question: How do these issues affect Brad Keselowski and other leading team owners in NASCAR?

In a recent interview with Bob Prockass, RFK team owner, Brad Keselowski, made the following remarks:

“I haven’t formed a strong opinion yet,” Keselowski remarked. “I would like a little bit more time before going deep and record. But it seems like things continue to progress.

But I’m not willing to go out on an edge and say that everything’s done. It’s really not. There’s good progress and I respect that. Yeah there’s probably some work to be done, but I don’t know. I’m not ready to commit to anything yet.

His statements, though diplomatic, hinted at the dissatisfaction team owners are having regarding the charter proposal.

Besides Keselowski, other drivers also had reservations about the new charter. Three times Daytona 500 Champion and the co-owner of 23XI racing, Denny Hamlin, was very vocal about it. Yeah, I think there’s still a ton of work to do. Not a little bit of work, you know, quite a bit,” is what he opined.

Additionally, what’s got team owners in a bind is the fact that NASCAR is about to embark on a larger media rights deal, set at $7.7 billion, a 40% increase over the previous agreement. Consequently, team owners claim that their portion should be raised for two reasons. First, to ensure their financial viability and second, to ensure the sport’s longevity.

 

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