23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports have released their exhibit list ahead of an antitrust lawsuit trial begins on Monday.

The two plaintiffs in this case against NASCAR and CEO Jim France filed a 44-page exhibit list on Wednesday, detailing the pieces of evidence their legal team will present over the expected 10 days in court.

MORE: 44-page exhibit list

As expected, many pieces on this list include unsealed messages between NASCAR executives, as well as other team owners. The exhibit list specifically includes such chats between Executive Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer Scott Prime and current Commissioner Steve Phelps; Roger Penske and France; Rick Hendrick and France; Jeff Dickerson and Prime; and current President Steve O’Donnell, Phelps, and Ben Kennedy.

Extensive financial data will also be a part of the trial as the legal teams focus on numerous aspects of the business list. This exhibit list even includes France’s tax return, Front Row Motorsports’ net income history, the Race Team Alliance’s 2022 tax return, consolidated financial statements for NASCAR Holdings, the media rights revenues, and 23XI Racing’s profit and loss statements among other items.

Many of these items on the exhibit list have already seen the light of day, especially with media members having access to the PACER service where files are uploaded. Discovery has unsealed countless messages dating back several years.

Many of these messages focus on the 2025 Charter Agreement negotiations, the catalyst for this antitrust lawsuit. Others have highlighted the different side effects of these negotiations, such as NASCAR’s Gold Codes document detailing plans to continue racing if teams boycotted events and the Race Team Alliance’s proposal for an exhibition race in the Middle East.

Other pieces of evidence will be new. This includes France’s W-2s from 2021 and 2022 and four year’s worth of 1099-NEC (non-employee compensation) forms from NASCAR to France and from France Enterprises to France.

Now, none of these items list their use. The legal team did not detail when and where it would pull out each piece of evidence on the exhibit list. However, certain items are fairly self-explanatory.

One point of contention in hearings over the past year is whether 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports could race at other tracks around the country. The Plaintiffs have said this is not possible due to NASCAR owning numerous tracks and having an agreement with Speedway Motorsports for the rest on the schedule.

This will be a part of the trial, if the exhibit list serves as any indication. This list calls for photos and drone footage of several tracks around the country.

Some of the tracks are Winchester Speedway, Five Flags Speedway, Spencer Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Pueblo Motorsports Park, Oswego Speedway, Martinsville Speedway, Chuckwalla Valley Raceway, and Autobahn Country Club.

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