NASCAR Cup Series Championship Betting Odds as Off-Track Drama Continues
NASCAR heads into its championship weekend under the shadow of a federal antitrust lawsuit with NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan. Its officiating has been under months-long scrutiny, and this week it issued a wave of hefty fines for alleged race manipulation in the final playoff qualifier. All of this as our friends at BetUS offer all the latest Championship Weekend odds and prop bets.
NASCAR Odds This Weekend
Rot Odds to Win NASCAR Cup Series Championship
1001 William Byron +250
1002 Ryan Blaney +200
1003 Joey Logano +280
1004 Tyler Reddick +330
More NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race Futures Betting Opions
Group Betting
Team of Race Winner
To Win Outright
Top 10 Finish
Top 3 Finish
Top 5 Finish
Top Chevrolet Driver
Top Ford Driver
Top Toyota Driver
Winning Manufacturer
Race Manipulation Claims
It’s elimination time in NASCAR’s playoffs at the reconfigured Charlotte Motor Speedway, where changes to the hybrid road course/oval called The Roval have created an uneasiness for the drivers racing for a championship.
The field of 12 will be cut by four drivers after Sunday’s race and Joey Logano, Daniel Suarez, Austin Cindric and Chase Briscoe are all below the cutline. William Byron is the only driver already locked into the round of eight, but Christopher Bell basically only needs to start the race to advance.
It means anything could happen on the reconfigured The Roval, the final race in what’s already been an unusual second round of the playoffs. A championship-eligible driver did not win at Kansas Speedway or Talladega Superspeedway, which took a chaotic turn last week at Talladega when 28 cars wrecked with five laps remaining in regulation to mark the biggest crash in NASCAR history.
NASCAR Trucks Driver Ty Majeski Fined $12,500 for Missing Media Session to Vote in Wisconsin
Truck Series championship contender Ty Majeski was fined $12,500 for skipping media obligations in North Carolina on Tuesday so he could vote in person in his home state of Wisconsin.
NASCAR Truck Series championship contender Ty Majeski was fined $12,500 by the stock car series this week after missing media obligations to vote in his home state of Wisconsin on Election Day.
Majeski is one of four drivers who can win the truck title at Phoenix Raceway on Friday night. Majeski talked with Thorsport Racing owners and all agreed he would cast his ballot in person on Tuesday.
Majeski called the penalty “unprecedented” and said he will appeal the decision.
“I felt like I needed to do my duty as a U.S. citizen to vote. My team owners and I, we all made the decision to exercise that right,” he said.
A NASCAR spokesman said the team never disclosed Majeski was not available because he was voting.
Michael Jordan Suit
Retired NBA great Michael Jordan and his fellow owners of two NASCAR teams went to federal court Monday for a hearing in their antitrust fight against the stock car series over what they say is an unfair business model.
23XI Racing, which is owned by Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by restaurant entrepreneur Bob Jenkins, sued NASCAR and chairman Jim France in October after months of tense negotiations over NASCAR’s charter system, which is essentially a franchise model that includes revenue sharing.
The two teams say NASCAR gave all Cup Series teams a last-minute, take-it-or-leave-it offer in September that both 23XI and Front Row refused to sign. The owners contend the charter system limits competition by unfairly binding teams to the series, its tracks and its suppliers, and they called the France family and NASCAR “monopolistic bullies.”
|