The White Sox announced Thursday that chairman and majority owner Jerry Reinsdorf and minority owner Justin Ishbia “have reached a long-term investment agreement that establishes a framework for Ishbia to obtain a future controlling interest in the White Sox.” Under the terms of the agreement, Ishbia will make “capital infusions” into the White Sox in 2025-26 that will pay down existing debt and “support ongoing team operations.”
There will be no immediate transfer of control — and none until at least 2029. The agreement gives Reinsdorf the option of selling his controlling interest to Ishbia at any point from 2029-33. After the 2034 season, Ishbia will have the option to acquire the controlling interest from Reinsdorf. If and when Ishbia does acquire the controlling stake, other minority owners will have the opportunity to sell to him as well. His brother, Mat Ishbia, the principal owner of the NBA’s Phoenix Suns and WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury, and his father, Jeff Ishbia, will be “significant” investors under the new agreement, too.
Reinsdorf, who purchased the White Sox in 1981, made the following statement within today’s press release:
“Having the incredible opportunity to own the Chicago White Sox and be part of Major League Baseball for nearly 50 years has been a life-changing experience. I have always expressed my intent to operate the White Sox as long as I am able and remain committed to returning this franchise to the level of on-field success we all expect and desire.”
Operating the club “as long as [he is] able” is a statement of some note. Reinsdorf is 89 as of this writing. He’ll be 90 next February and will be 93 when the initial window of potential transfer opens in 2029. By the time Ishbia has the option of purchasing the majority stake outright and of his own volition, Reinsdorf would be just a few months from his 99th birthday. That’s not intended to delve too far into the macabre, but the question of Reinsdorf’s ability to oversee day-to-day operations of the club as he ages into his mid-90s is difficult to overlook.
There’s also the question of the White Sox’ location. They’ve been on Chicago’s south side more than a century — one of the eight charter MLB teams established back in 1901. Reinsdorf has previously sought to move the Sox to Central Florida in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There have been far more recent rumors and speculation about a potential relocation to Nashville, although Reinsdorf was also looking into a new stadium in Chicago’s South Loop as recently as last year. The Sox’ current lease at Guaranteed Rate Field runs through 2029 — the first year that the current agreement opens the window for Ishbia to become majority owner.
The 47-year-old Ishbia has a reported net worth of more than $5 billion. Earlier this year, he was viewed as the leading candidate to purchase the division-rival Twins from the Pohlad family, but Ishbia abandoned that pursuit when the opportunity to increase his stake in the White Sox arose.
The 180-degree turn reportedly shocked the Twins, who had previously believed there was a path to completing a sale to Ishbia prior to Opening Day. At the time, White Sox officials denied to Jon Greenberg and Dan Hayes of The Athletic that there was a path to control of the White Sox available to Ishbia, but less than four months later, the team has now publicly revealed the specifics of that path.
Reinsdorf has increasingly drawn the ire of White Sox fans amid a yearslong spell of noncompetitive clubs. The White Sox won the 2005 World Series but have reached the postseason only three times since, never advancing beyond the first round of play. Reinsdorf conceded to a rebuild in 2016 when he allowed then-GM Rick Hahn to tear the roster down to the studs and build a new core from the ground up. By 2019, the Sox had the top farm system in baseball and an emerging core built around potential stars like Jose Abreu, Yoan Moncada, Luis Robert Jr., Eloy Jimenez, Dylan Cease and Lucas Giolito — among others. The plan looked to have worked when the Sox reached the playoffs in 2020 and 2021, but by 2022 the wheels had come off as that core regressed and/or fell to injury.
Viewed anywhere from loyal (to a fault) to insular, Reinsdorf brought Tony La Russa back to manage the club in 2021 — going over Hahn’s head to bring his friend back for another go-around as manager. The Sox won in year one despite some clear hiccups along the way, but reports during that 2022 season of a miserable clubhouse culture emerged.
La Russa was out by season’s end, at which point Hahn hired former Royals coach Pedro Grifol as La Russa’s dugout successor. A losing team and further reports of clubhouse tumult persisted, and by Aug. 2023, Hahn and longtime executive vice president Kenny Williams were dismissed. The pair had ranked among the longest-tenured executives in the entire sport. Rather than conduct an outside search for a new front office, Reinsdorf promoted assistant GM Chris Getz to general manager just days after firing Hahn and Williams.
Getz fired Grifol last year after a historically bad 28-89 start to the season. The 2024 White Sox wound up setting the modern record for futility, losing 121 games. The 2025 Rockies are on pace to make that a short-lived record, but it was nevertheless a dubious distinction that shone a spotlight on the stunningly swift nature of the White Sox’ fall from an MLB-best farm system and team-on-the-rise status to the dregs of Major League Baseball.
Getz hired former big league outfielder Will Venable — who’d been Bruce Bochy’s right-hand man in Texas — as his club’s new skipper this past offseason. The second-year GM has been tasked with the latest rebuild, again rebuilding the farm system through a series of trades and high draft picks. Chicago’s farm system is unequivocally in a better spot than it was just a few years ago, but there’s little hope of a return to competitive play on the near-term horizon — particularly in an increasingly formidable AL Central that sent three teams to the playoffs in 2024 and currently has four teams with winning records.
If and when the time comes for Getz & Co. to reenter the free agent market to supplement a new core, Reinsdorf’s frugality in free agency will again return to the forefront of conversations surrounding the Sox. Despite playing in one of the largest markets in baseball, Reinsdorf tends to run the South Siders more like a small-market operation. They did run out a $193MM Opening Day payroll in 2022 and a $181MM payroll in 2023, as noted at Cot’s Contracts, but those are clear outliers. The Sox have never had a payroll of even $130MM outside those two seasons. Even more incredibly, Andrew Benintendi’s five-year, $75MM contract remains the largest contract in White Sox history. The White Sox and A’s are the only two teams in baseball that have never given out a contract of at least $100MM.
For all these reasons, the news of a light at the end of the tunnel on Reinsdorf’s ownership tenure has been met by fans with a blend of celebratory relief and frustration that there’s not a more immediate transition of power in today’s agreement. Even if we’re at least four years from a bona fide sea change, today’s announcement is still a turning point in White Sox history — one that provides a countdown clock for the turnover long coveted by the fan base.
white sox fans are now possibly freed, just hope they don’t move the team
They are Michigan boys, hopefully that is enough to keep them on the south side
The White Sox aren’t going anywhere
Too late or me. I’ll be 69 in August. By the time any real change happens I’ll be dead in all likelihood.
Dark, bro.
I know the feeling.
Hang in there Uncle. Positive vibes and thoughts man.
I think you have it in you to stick around long enough to see the real change.
You will be just fine Uncle Mike!
You’ve done your part and paid your dues. Sell out and get out and go live.
Take a look at what one Ishiba has done to the Suns. This is good news because you’re getting rid of Reinsdorf but who knows if it’ll mean a better product.
Right, if Justin is anything like Matt (suns owner) I wouldn’t get too excited. Matt has had 3 coaches in 3 years and is very hands on
Matt played basketball at Michigan State, which gives him insights into how a team functions. His mistake was trading for Bradley Beal, anybody would of traded for Durant in his shoes. I agree though, they haven’t exactly shown patience with the coaching staff. I hope Justin builds from the ground up and keeps homegrown talent. He also needs to know when a team is just a free agent or two away from contending and not be cheap then.
kingbum: Playing a sport in college has nothing to do with knowing how to own and operate a professional sports franchise.
Jerry Jerry Jerry, please don’t leave. You’re such a brilliant owner. You’ve been underestimated for your contributions and your insights into the direction this franchise has gone.
You bilked the tax payers of Illinois, and Florida and Arizona over the years – but hey, nobody is perfect.
Yet you bought the franchise for peanuts.
Yes, Reinsdorf is truly a genius when it comes to running a major league franchise. He picks only the best FO people, puts the pressure on other teams with his contending team, and is almost realizing his dream of recreating the 1940-50’s Brooklyn Dodgers. Magical.
I don’t blame Matt for going hard for Kevin Durant. His mistake came with trading for Bradley Beal. That’s the move that put the Suns in the hole it’s in. Matt spends money down in Phoenix though so as baseball is uncapped hopefully at least Justin would be willing to sign a $100 million deal.
I was going to make the same comment.
Justin Ishbia is a founding partner in the CHICAGO-based private equity firm, Shore Capital Partners. He’s also currently building a north suburban Winnetka mansion that is set for a total cost of $77.7 million, including what they will spend on land acquisition, construction of the new mansion and demolition of existing houses on the property. The amount the Ishbias will spend will be the highest amount anyone has ever paid for a single residence in the Chicago area. digitaledition.chicagotribune.com/tribune/article_…
That’s good news. It shows he’s willing to spend.
Aside from his Chicago-based business venture, it also shows he’s committing to live in the Chicago metro area as the White Sox owner. 🙂
So he spent more on a house than the White Sox have spent on a player.
LordD99: Maybe he can build a new stadium in his backyard.
The announcement of the impending move will happen after season ticket renewals.
This transaction will **never** happen.
Ask David Einhorn (Greenlight Capital) about his “agreed upon deal” in 2011 – to buy the Mets in the future.
Old man Wilpon woke up one day and simply changed his mind.
Said he “never agreed to the terms.”
Old man Reinsdorf will wake up one day in the future and change his mind.
If you have agreed to sell the team, sell the team now.
If you have agreed to buy the team, buy the team now.
Oh, hey, by the way, who was Fred Wilpon’s closest ally among all the MLB owners?
Jerry Reinsdorf.
Good for the White Sox and their fans, at least Ishbia has some deep pockets and can hopefully inject new life & money into the team. Just don’t move them.
splendid: Reinsdorf also has the money to inject new life into the team, he just chooses not to. He clearly no longer has the ability to operate the team. He hasn’t in years. Hopefully the control of the Sox will be sped up and the Ishbias will take control sooner.
Don’t kid yourself. This man has ALL his mental faculties. The main goal when selling ANY investment is to minimize capital gains tax. I believe this type of transaction does just that.
Ive been a fan for most of my life and this is not good for the White Sox. I dont know either personally, but Reinsdorf was a good owner, put good teams on the field, made an effort to win and manage the business properly.
I don’t like the change one bit, and I dont know why they sold.
bwmiller: How is Reinsdorf a good owner? Did you not watch the Sox for the last three+ seasons?
He has never watched them apparently. He just likes to troll.
Future controlling interest=after Jerry dies
As soon as Jerry finally dies, he’ll move the team to the moon.
There goes the team ERA.
The MoonBase MoonSox.
The inaugural team of space force baseball
Brule’s rules.
@ueckerlele
I like the idea of a universal league. Maybe we can set-up a few teams on Venus and Mars…
@ OY – I don’t think that you are taking into account the gravity of the situation.
@CarverAndrews
Hmm… for some reason, the Reply button isn’t there for me to reply to you. Anyway, I was just playing along with the same sarcastic manner of ueckerlele.
@OY – And I was just contributing a bad pun for the hell of it in the same spirit.
I have no idea how the reply button shows up or doesn’t at times. I figured that it was all about muting folks but I only have one poster on mute. And yet there are times that I cannot reply to someone directly, and other times it works. Probably a flaw in the system; meaningless to me as if I reply I usually just put the name of the person in there anyway. I get confused by the layout of the replies.
@CarverAndrews
Oh, sorry, I misread your original post.
@OY – As someone who is afflicted with bad pun disease, I am quite used to having to explain myself, and / or being told to leave the room.
Get out of here, Carver!
…
You too?
Sounds like more bs.
The bid to buy the Twins was just leverage. Letting Reinsdorf know their money was going elsewhere.
LOL, no. Twins fans are so wound up with conspiracy theories, but the Ishbia’s backing out of the Twins deal makes little to no sense from a leverage perspective. The Ishbia’s would have lost all their leverage with the White Sox by backing out without a controlling ownership agreement for Chicago already in place.
The White Sox are the dramatically superior organization to own at the moment, but the Ishbia’s do not own the White Sox or have controlling interest until Reinsdorf dies. A massive increase in value is due for the franchise when it moves stadiums, but that’s likely to happen long before Reinsdorf is gone so the Ishbia’s will likely miss out on the value increase.
Good news but 2029 is way too far off . Reinsdorf is one of the cheapest and densest owners of any major sports franchise. Chicago deserves so much better than his small market brain wasting one of the biggest & best markets in the country. Sox fans want and deserve an owner that wants to win.
Ishbia won’t take over at max 2034.
They are likely to get an owner that will use revenues from the team for payroll. For most teams, that caps spending, and it won’t become the Mets. But if the right people are brought in, amazing things can happen.
MLB wants teams in more markets, so you are probably not going to get what you want as a Sox fan. Although Nashville is a nice place to visit.
Good lord thank you! This just made my day, I will now inform my co-workers as we are tired of Jerry Reinsdorf!
@Acoss1331
So, White Sox will be Dodgers of 2030s? Get ready for $50 beer and $100 nosebleed seats.
One thing at a time! Let me savor the moment!
Reinsdorf is a narcissistic wart that just will not let go. He has destroyed this organization front top to bottom. Without question one of the greediest despicable sports owners in history
John Fisher has entered the chat.
Palehose: Bill Veeck was right about Reinsdorf.
I dont know him personally but we had a good rebuild going in 2021, I thought we had a legitimate shot to win the WS. The team fell apart and we are back to rebuilding. The rebuild is already going well.
He’s a terrible owner
I disagree. Im happy the Sox dont have any terrible contracts on their books. We had some great players spend their careers with the team during my life — Frank Thomas, Paul Konerko, Ozzie Guillen, Carlton Fisk, Robin Ventura, Mark Buerhle, Jose Abreu, Tim Raines, Harold Baines, many other great players, its a great team, the White Sox, one of the all time great franchises. Reinsdorf was the owner for 50 years, and its still a great franchise, great fans, nice ballpark, have a good farm system, good coaches, and we will be back to winning soon. You dont have to spend money like a fool to be a good owner. Cant wait to get rid of Robert – and that was a great contract. Eloy’s was too. We were ahead of everybody with rookie extensions, it didnt work out with Robert and Jimenez but it didnt crush the payroll either.
“…remain committed to returning this franchise to the level of on-field success we all expect and desire.”
Reinsdorf is so full of poop, he may as well be a septic tank.
Shawshank Redemption is in the chat.
There was no imminent path available to Ishbia to establish a controlling interest but here we are. Now do the Angels.
As a Tiger fan that’s a huge disappointment as I was hoping the Ishbia’s would buy the Tigers when Mother Marian cashes in her chips since the Illitchs have no interest in spending any real
$$$$ on the team. The current iteration is doing well in spite of ownership, but once the bills come due to pay players like Skubal & Greene there’s no way the Illitchs open up their wallet like the Ishbias would be willing to do…
The current iteration of the Tigers is doing well because of ownership. Since Mr I, they have brought in successful people to run the club. Its always nice, and an advantage to have a high payroll, but this market has not supported the team to the level needed to do what Mr I did for a short time. The farm must keep contributing, and as most players get expensive, they will be replaced. It is what it is.
It is not how much you spend on the team, it is how you spend it qualitatively.
The Tigers are a small to mid market team that spent way beyond its revenue base for a time when Mike Illitch had money to burn and father time’s clock was loudly ticking on Mr. I’s closing act.
The Tigers are now on a more sustainable long term business model with a recently rated #1 farm system in MLB.
They can stay competitive and not over spend their budget with wise MLB drafts, wise trades, smart international signings and occasional shorter term free agent signings.
Gone are the days of checkbook free agent signings of overpriced, declining veteran players that act as an anchor on the team’s budget and long term competitiveness.
Pizza pizza
How are the Toshiba family so rich?
@Reynaldo’s
Makin’ money… You should try it…
Toshiba family got rich from making crappy TVs. This is the Ishbia family. Google search can be your friend.
@playhard – Actually, crappy TV’s were only a small part of Toshiba. A very small part. Did your friend turn on you? .
Seems like playhard9 muted me, but I know for a a fact those “Crappy TVs” made by Toshiba can and still have lasted longer than the average modern flatscreen TVs
Ishbia’s grandfather owned Sherwood Foods Distribution (originally Regal Packing) and sold it for a boatload of $$$$ in the late 80’s. Matt Ishbia owns UWM Holdings wh/ is one of the largest mortgage brokers in the country.
So they are self made men and not nepo babies?
The family as a whole is successful but in different areas so they are self-made
This concept of “self-made” is almost always based upon myth. While gramps might have been totally self-made (I don’t know the history of Sherwood Foods or how it started) but his money and access allowed his son Jeff the money and access to become a bigshot lawyer and start UWM – a huge mortgage broker that became what it did by hook and by crook. The kids today are only who they are due to all of that cash and access from gramps and pops.
It is almost as ridiculous as calling the clown prez a self-made businessman.
Born into wealth.
Used some of their inherited wealth wisely on other business ventures also.
With the Bears move to Arlington Heights almost being complete I can see the Sox buying the old Soldier Field and Building a new Stadium there.
Would be a great location!
The Rate — what a dumb nickname for a ballpark — is easy to get to on the El. Can’t say that for Soldier Field.
Bring more fans into a better neighborhood, Traffic wouldnt be as bad going to a 35k Stadium compared to 55k plus Soldier Field, also would be great place to tailgate
Soldier Field is nowhere near the El and it’s within the Museum Campus, which brings its own issues.
Fanboys would tear down a big-city ballpark in a big-city neighborhood to erect a government-funded sportsball palace in an inconvenient location.
Wish it were sooner–but maybe it will be. Sometimes these kinds of agreements, though they clearly set a timetable, are adjusted along the way to accelerate that timetable.
In any case, the fact that Ishbia is going to be putting more money in the pot starting now, that might lead to some increased free-agent spending as soon as the coming off-season. The Sox have some good young players coming, but they will need that too.
I think Reinsdorf is, in a way, acknowledging that, just like the rest of us, he isn’t going to live forever. It is hard for me to imagine how someone as rich and arrogant as he is thinks. How they live their lives and think about the future. But it might be that he is confronting the reality of the Great Leveller, which is surely a good thing for the soul–and, incidentally, in this case, for the White Sox.
I suspect that if Jerry dies before 2029, his estate would offer to accelerate the transaction.
Alan: The problem is, if the Ishbias put more money into the team, it’s still Getz and Reinsdorf mis-spending it.
Reinsdorf has said he’s trying to hang around for 2033, because that’s the 100th anniversary of the first all-star game which was held of course on the South Side.
Jerry seems to think that MLB is going to let the Sox host the 2033 game, like they did the 50th anniversary in 1983. That seems like a big assumption especially with the Cubs probably getting the 2027 game now.
Maybe with a new ballpark though.
He’s not getting a new stadium.
I don’t wish JR to die whatsoever, the White Sox will exist before and after Jerry.
I just want Jerry Reinsdorf gone and no longer owner of the White Sox.
Does this mean if Jerry passes away sooner than 2029, that his family will hold on to the Sox? Does the 2029 date have to do with the stadium? You think this news was accelerated to break because of the Fire having a competent enough owner to beat the Sox to the 78 development?
2029 is when the stadium lease expires. For those who don’t know, that deal is the best deal in baseball.
sportsbusinessjournal.com/Articles/2023/09/14/chic…
Basically, Ishbia is ponying up money for a new stadium, something Reinsdorf wasn’t going to do
The above article seems to say Ishbia is paying down debt, not kicking out for a stadium. Maybe down the road that will come out.
Nowhere to go but up
Important to notice that this won’t happen til 2034 at max and 2029 at minimum. Jerry will still own the White Sox til the day he dies as said countless amount of times. 2024-death will be the final era of the JR era.
From one ahole owner to an even bigger one. Nice
Got measurements? Where is the data?
On one hand I’m relieved to possibly see an end to the Reinsdorf era. It’s been a real mixed bag, mostly bad over the last decade.
On the other hand Ishbia’s brothers handling of the Suns gives me a lot of pause about whether this is a good thing.
I also want to know why waiting for the White Sox was preferable to just owning the Twins now.
Because. WAMT- ask C.C.
Probably gonna end up like the timberwolves where the agreed purchase price will differ drastically from the present day value and someone will want to go back on the agreement. 5-10 years is too long.
This gives him more time to continue be cheap and MLB off his back since he now has an arrangement in place but not really since he’s not dying anytime soon.
Shoutout White Sox Dave
This news also comes amid reports that the Sox’ TV channel CHSN will finally get on Xfinity in and adjacent to Chicagoland. CHSN is currently a streamer that’s also on OTA subchannels.
That would be good- I have CHSN on my DirecTV, but not Xfinity. Great telecasts with in game features
Perfect now sell the bulls!
This is a WIN-WIN, it’s nearly impossible for the Ishbia’s to do worse than 7 playoffs appearances in 45-50 years (1 championship)!
I think whether they move them to Nashville in the ‘30s which I think makes tons of sense to me. Or if & when he finds them a new home in Chicago, I’m confident it will be much better for fans & the organization.
Wish he would sell the bulls, hes run that organization into the ground as well.
This is, in effect, an immediate sale that will allow Ishbia to run the team. It makes sense. Ishbia leveraged the possible Twins purchase to get Reinsdorf to sell to him – and to likely transition control immediately.
It is not an outright sale now because of taxes. As a tax guy, I can say that it would be crazy for Reinsdorf to actually sell now at his age. His gain since acquiring the majority stake in the team is likely well over one billion dollars. On a sale, figure he would pay over $300 million in income tax. If this sale occurs the day after he dies, the gain is wiped out.
This is a sale for all intents and purposes. It just cannot become official until after Reinsdorf dies.
Good news for cities looking for a franchise.
The best news that Sox fans have gotten this decade is that they only have to wait until 2035 until they can start thinking about having a good team again.
They can always think about having a good team. They just can’t expect it.
Excellent article, Steve! You said everything this Sox fan feels about ownership.
I think that, whatever happens, it is very very unlikely the Sox will be moved to another city. I am surprised that smart people are worrying about that; it’s never going to happen.
Gotta believe there are “escalator clauses” in the deal that will accelerate
New Ownership taking over as the Control group much sooner especially as Jerry R continues to “age out” of running a MLB franchise.
Ishbia is not dumb and its not throwing large amounts of capital around
for Jerry to flush down the commode.
Ishbia’s increased investment in the team and pursuit of a new stadium will gradually give him more and more control of the White Sox most likely sooner rather than later.
Just design and build a much nicer, more cutting edge, more fan and city friendly ballpark in Chicago than the last 2 ballparks that were nothing special.
And, include a transit station and hub to manage the crowds and traffic around the new ballpark.
Not having Rodon pitch in the 2021 playoffs sent the Sox spiralling downward. LaRussa batting .195 hitting Moncado second during much of ’22 is evidence of LaRussa’s downward spiral.
Sorry, but are you insane or just decrepit? Rodon started game 4, got rocked and didn’t get out of the 3rd inning. You know, the deciding game the Sox lost 10-1? Was at that game.
Great day for White Sox fans!!
JR lied! Who would have ever thought that possible?
Lifestyles of the rich and famous
100 years old and can’t let go.
Reinsdorf has been a net negative on the White Sox and MLB overall.
“The question of Reinsdorf’s ability to oversee day-to-day operations of the club as he ages into his mid-90s is difficult to overlook.”
No. It’s a huge elephant in the room.
Reinsdorf agrees to sell Sox, as soon as they win 120 regular season games in one season
“one of the eight charter MLB teams established back in 1901.”
What???
The National League was founded in 1876, the American League in 1901, each with 8 teams, and they began to play the World Series against each other in 1903.
“The agreement gives Reinsdorf the option of selling his controlling interest to Ishbia at any point from 2029-33.” Reinsdorf is 89. Does he think he’s going to live forever?
Jerry has very little to no shot living the next 10 years.