Following a report from the Sports Business Journal, NASCAR boss Jim France is stepping down as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) but will remain as the Chairman and majority owner of NASCAR.
France, who turns 82 later this year, took over the position from nephew Brian France in 2018 following his arrest on suspicion of DUI in Sag Harbor, New York.
Steve O’Donnell, who was the president of NASCAR, will be promoted to the role of CEO. A part of the sport in various roles since 1996, he will be the fifth person ever and the first outside the France family to hold the position of CEO since NASCAR’s founding in 1948. He worked his way up from the marketing department, wearing several hats as he climbed the executive ladder.
Ben Kennedy, who is the great-grandson of NASCAR founder Bill France Sr., will become the sport’s Chief Operating Officer (COO). He was the Executive Vice President and Chief Venue & Racing Innovations Officer. Kennedy is a former racer himself, and a winner in both the NASCAR Craftsman Truck and ARCA Menards East Series.
An official announcement is expected at Talladega Superspeedway this weekend.
This is not the first significant executive change for NASCAR in the first few months of the year either. Following the contentious 23XI Racing vs. NASCAR lawsuit that went to trial in December, 2025, before ending in a settlement, NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps resigned before the start of the 2026 season. That position has not been filled and those duties have since been spread out between O’Donnell and Kennedy.
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