TALLADEGA, Ala. On Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway, NASCAR majority owner Jim France stepped down as chief executive officer and appointed Steve O'Donnell as his successor; France will remain chairman and retain his majority ownership stake. Ben Kennedy was promoted to chief operating officer, and O'Donnell becomes the first CEO from outside the France family. Charlotte, N.C., this week, the leadership change follows O'Donnell's more-than-three-decade tenure at NASCAR, including his promotion to president in March 2025. The transition comes after 2025 revenue-sharing negotiations that produced an antitrust suit and a December settlement granting teams permanent charters; immediate next steps include O'Donnell taking operational control and engaging with teams and sponsors.
Prepared by Emily Rhodes and reviewed by editorial team.
This NASCAR shakeup could impact your viewing experience. With O'Donnell at the helm, expect possible changes in race formats and scheduling. If you're a fan, keep an eye on NASCAR's official announcements.
Steve O'Donnell's promotion marks a historic shift in NASCAR's leadership. His long tenure and recent antitrust settlement could bring stability and innovation. Worth forwarding if you know a NASCAR enthusiast curious about the sport's future.
Steve O'Donnell and Ben Kennedy gained formal leadership roles, and NASCAR ownership preserved continuity while delegating operational control.
Some teams and stakeholders faced friction during recent revenue-sharing negotiations and legal disputes that preceded the leadership transition.
Steve O'Donnell interview: Why the time was right for NASCAR's leadership change
The New York TimesSteve O'Donnell Named NASCAR CEO; France Remains Chairman
Beaumont Enterprise Winnipeg Free Press Sportsnet WKMGNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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