1:55pm: The team is expected to remain in the Tampa Bay area if the current sale process is completed, Marc Topkin and Colleen Wright of the Tampa Bay Times report. It’s not yet clear where exactly within that region Zalupski’s group would seek to have a new stadium built.
12:18pm: The Rays have issued the following statement acknowledging the negotiations but declined to provide further comment or details:
“The Tampa Bay Rays announced that the team has recently commenced exclusive discussions with a group led by Patrick Zalupski, Bill Cosgrove, Ken Babby and prominent Tampa Bay investors concerning a possible sale of the team. Neither the Rays nor the group will have further comment during the discussions.”
11:40am: Rays owner Stuart Sternberg is in “advanced talks” with Jacksonville real estate developer Patrick Zalupski about a sale of the franchise for approximately $1.7 billion, per a report from Scott Soshnick and Kurt Badenhausen of Sportico. Zalupski has signed a letter of intent to purchase the club, the Sportico pair adds, though that does not signify that a deal will definitely cross the line. Still, Joel Sherman off the New York Post hears similarly, reporting that talks between the two parties are serious and that the Zalupski-led group is the only buyer with which the Rays are negotiating at the moment.
Sternberg purchased the Rays franchise for $200MM back in 2004 and has spent years unsuccessfully attempting to secure public funding for a new stadium in or around the St. Petersburg/Tampa area. A deal finally looked to be well on its way toward completion a year ago, but Hurricane Milton wrought catastrophic damage on Tropicana Field, derailing those plans and pushing the Rays to temporarily relocate to Tampa’s George M. Steinbrenner Field — home to the Yankees’ Florida State League affiliate and their annual home park during spring training.
Zalupski is the CEO of Dream Finders Homes, a publicly traded, Jacksonville-based developer that has built more than 31,000 homes across ten states. Forbes estimates his net worth at $1.4 billion, while his company’s valuation rests at $3.4 billion.
Per Sportico, Zalupski is the lead investor in a larger group that counts Ken Babby and Bill Cosgrove among several potential minority stakeholders. The former holds majority stakes in the Marlins’ Triple-A affiliate and the Guardians’ Double-A club and is the son of prominent NBA agent (and former Phoenix Suns president of basketball operations) Lon Babby. The latter is the CEO of Union Home Mortgage Group. Other investors are involved and figure to come to light if the sale process indeed continues toward completion.
The potential sale of the team comes just months after spring reports suggesting that commissioner Rob Manfred and several owners throughout MLB were beginning to pressure Sternberg to orchestrate a sale of the club. At the time, Sternberg was said to at the very least be courting additional minority owners to invest in the team — all while local business leaders were in the early stages of putting together groups to potentially pursue a majority stake in the club. None of Zalupski, Cosgrove or Babby were listed as prospective buyers at the time, though it’s fair to presume they were involved in and/or spearheading some of those early efforts.
Sternberg has owned the Rays for more than two decades, and the team’s stadium has been at the forefront of any and all narratives surrounding the organization since that time. With the A’s in the process of moving to a new home on the Las Vegas strip, Tropicana Field was considered perhaps the most dilapidated facility in Major League Baseball — even before last year’s hurricane damage, which saw the entire roof ripped off “the Trop” and left the Rays without a home stadium for a few months. The move to Steinbrenner Field currently only runs through the 2025 season.
Throughout his time owning the Rays, Sternberg has explored a variety of options ranging from constructing a new facility on the existing site of Tropicana Field, to building a new stadium in downtown Ybor City — even to a convoluted split arrangement that would see the Rays host half their home games in Florida and half in Montreal. Beyond the dated nature of Tropicana Field, the location of the park has been a frequent source of consternation for fans; the stadium is not in Tampa proper but rather on the nearby — and, for many, difficult to access — Pinellas County peninsula in the city of St. Petersburg. That’s one of many prominent factors in the Rays’ longstanding attendance troubles.
With the Rays residing in a small media market and perennially unable to ramp up attendance, payroll has been a frequent issue. Tampa Bay is among the bottom teams in the league each year in terms of player payroll, despite receiving hefty annual sums from the league’s revenue-sharing system. The constant payroll restrictions from Sternberg have led to the Rays becoming notorious for developing star players then trading them off to other clubs for packages of younger, more controllable and — crucially — cheaper talent. That’s created something of a self-fulfilling prophecy, as it’s hard to retain fans and bolster attendance when local residents’ favorite players are constantly being shipped out for young players that are general unknowns to the majority of the fan base.
Prior to Hurricane Milton, the Rays had a tentative agreement for the construction of a $1.3 billion, 30,000-seat facility in the Gas Plant district near the existing Tropicana Field site. Construction of that park was part of a larger $6.5 billion redevelopment project in the area. Mass hurricane damage in the area slowed critical votes on funding and raised difficult to unanswerable questions about the cost of repairing Tropicana Field, the viability of potential interim homes for the Rays and various other logistical issues. Sternberg announced back in March that his team was no longer pursuing the Gas Plant project — an outcome that had grown increasingly inevitable as frustrations between the team, the city of St. Petersburg and Pinellas County all played out in ugly, public fashion.
The lost 2025 season at Tropicana Field also pushed the Rays’ existing lease at the stadium back a year; it had been slated to expire after the 2027 season but now runs through the 2028 campaign. Of course, it’s still not entirely clear that Tropicana Field will be repaired in time for the Rays to play their 2026 home games there. Colleen Wright of the Tampa Bay Times recently reported that the city of St. Petersburg approved another $5.3MM in funding, bringing the total to $38.5MM of the estimated $57MM needed to repair Tropicana Field’s damages. Whether the remainder of that funding will be approved and whether the requisite work can be completed in a timely manner remain unclear.
If the potential sale goes through, there will still be more questions than answers. The hope is that Tropicana Field will be ready at or very near the beginning of the 2026 regular season. Even if that timeline stays on track — in terms of securing remaining funding, completing the work and the wild card of avoiding any further weather damage during hurricane season — it still wouldn’t be clear where the team’s home games would take place following the 2028 campaign.
Manfred has said his hope is to keep two teams in Florida, though even that opens various possibilities. The Rays have explored building sites in several neighborhoods, and Hall of Famer Barry Larkin referenced the Rays’ ongoing stadium concerns when discussing his efforts as part of a group that hopes to bring Major League Baseball to Orlando. Looking beyond Florida, the cities of Nashville, Salt Lake City and Portland have made a desire to bring MLB to their cities known as well. All of those locations will be speculatively tied to the Rays as the current ownership situation plays out.
What’s Sportico
If you click on the link it will take you to that article. It’s a more business-focused sports media site
I copied the article and replaced “Stuart Sternberg” with “Arte Moreno” and then “Rays” with “Angels” and it made my day.
You wish lol.
While I get everybody wants their team to spend money on their own teams or sell. As some teams should but when is enough going to be enough. These guys still get paid a king’s ransom to play a game. Which a lot of them act like spoiled brats. Yes get some type of ceiling and basement set in salary. Then we also need to find a commissioner who doesn’t change rules or product to get the results to what he wants to happen. Then also get teams that have the best players on the roster period regardless the age or salary of the player.
Stubby, I get your point, in the case of Angels, it has less to do with money spent on players and more to with funds spent on team operations. That includes the scouting system, the front office, analytics and player facilities. Arte Moreno has been known to cut corners in all of these aspects. The recent MLB survey of players reflects this notion. The fans of Orange County are numerous and strong, and we’re sick and tired of the dog and pony show of free Hawaiian shirts and cheap bobble heads.
While the Rays take heat for selling their stars most all of those ‘stars’ declined after the trades.
Crawford
Longoria
Archer
Price
Zobrist
Fans that want to keep their star players beyond age 30 are doing their team no favors.
It’s a place to play sports in Puerto Rico.
Great news for baseball. Now the next move is to relocate the team because Tampa has never been able to support the Rays. And I used to live there and go to games so don’t poo poo on my opinion.
Jacksonville seems like a perfect location.
Orlando is the best Florida market. If the team moves out of the Tampa-St. Pete area, it will be to Orlando.
Sorry for you I suppose that they’re not going anywhere.
Nutting and Reinsdorf take note: there’s never been a better time to sell!!!
Same with John Stanton and Co. with the Mariners…sell the team Stanton!
If we sell we might get moved to okc
Nobody wants to buy the Pirates and keep them in the historically bad Pittsburgh baseball market.
Your record is stuck on the same lyrics, Richard. Look for scratches on your vinyl.
No.
The Nutting-haters have been stuck on the same lyrics every day for two decades because they can’t accept the reality that Pittsburgh is now, and always has been, a bad market for baseball.
RichardAI
Pittsburgh isn’t a bad baseball market when there is a watchable product on the field, and I can back that up with a stat for you. In 2015, they drew 2,498,596 fans to PNC Park. This included an average of 30,847 fans per game over their 81 home games. Oh, and not coincidentally, that season also saw the Pirates win 98 games,
Give Pittsburgh fans something to watch, they’ll turn out. Give them nothing outside of Skenes, of course attendance will be way down. Don’t blame the fans or market there though for a lousy owner.
Thanx for the more prudent facts, Outlaw.
In 2015, when the Pirates won the second-most games in MLB and went to the playoffs for the third straight year, they were NINTH of the FIFTEEN National League teams in attendance. The Brewers, who play in a smaller market than Pittsburgh, had a record of 68-94 that season and had a higher attendance than the Pirates.
In 1992, the Pirates won their division for the third straight season and couldn’t sell out the National League Championship Series.
In 1979, the Pirates won the World Series and were TENTH of the TWELVE National League teams in attendance.
Even when the Pirates are one of the best teams in baseball, their attendance is substandard.
Pittsburgh has a Fifty year history of being a bad market for baseball.
Appalachian_Outlaw,
You cite the 30,847 attendance figure as something special for a team that won 98 games and reached the playoffs for the third straight season.
The Colorado Rockies currently have record of 16-57 and are drawing 27,522 per game.. just 3,300 fewer than the Pirates drew when they were one of the very best teams in baseball and 10,000 more than the Pirates are drawing this year.
I haven’t been to Pitt in a while, but my understanding is, that has gentrified immensely. There was a lot of money associated with Google, Carnegie Mellon and tech startups pumped into the local economy. Distant history is not relevant.
Milwaukee has almost double the population of Pittsburgh, so they should have more fans.
FWIW, the Steelers are 17 of 31 in franchise valuation (5.3B) from 2024 Forbes list with an operating budget also as 17 of 31 teams — in the same city. Obviously, this isn’t the same sport and different owners, but Pirates are 24 of 30 MLB teams in franchise valuations from 2024 Forbes article, with an operating budget is around the same.
That should illustrate that there’s room for growth in the same market. If the Pirates winning pct were higher consistently than Steelers and still the same results, then I could see the theorization that they’re hitting their ceiling.
The Pittsburgh metropolitan area has a population of 2.42 million.
The Milwaukee metropolitan area has a population of 1.56 million.
statista.com/statistics/183600/population-of-metro…
Run DMC,
As I wrote above, the Pirates went to the playoffs for the third straight time in 2015 and had the second most wins in MLB. Their attendance was 9th of the 15 National League teams. The Brewers, who play in a smaller market than Pittsburgh and had a record of 68-94 that year, had a higher attendance than the Pirates.
You have it backwards. Pittsburgh metro is far larger than Milwaukee metro. “While Milwaukee’s metropolitan area population is around 1.5 million residents
, Pittsburgh’s metropolitan area population is actually larger, with over 2.45 million residents according to the 2020 Census.”
The metro population or city and close suburb population is the more important number. Pittsburgh metro is listed at 2.46M and Milwaukee at 1.57M so Milwaukee actually has almost 1M less potential fans in just the near suburbs and still regularly trounces Pittsburgh in attendance.
It is mostly the system that alienated a possible generation of baseball fans in flyover country because of the widening income discrepancy. It has little to do with being a bad baseball market, as those cities supported their teams very well when there was a snowballs chance in Hades of getting anywhere.
Richard, regionally, who do the Rockies have to compete with if fans want to see a Major League baseball game? They’re pulling from a large area with no competition.
Pittsburgh, on the other hand, has Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Cleveland all within a reasonable driving distance.
You’re trying hard to turn a lousy ownership problem into a fan base issue, and you’re wrong here.
Richard, here are some more numbers for you.
Pittsburgh’s park has a capacity of 38,747, which they filled at about an 80% rate.
Milwaukee has a capacity of 41,900, which they filled at about a 76% rate. The Brewers had achieved success in the previous two seasons, including two consecutive NL Central titles, too. PECOTA projections were down on them from years prior, but it was still projected to be an 80 win ball club. No one expected Milwaukee to be that bad then, and a lot of tickets probably sold early
I think the fact that they’re really pretty similar speaks to the fact they’re just similar.
If Pittsburgh had an owner that would even just spend some, say to 125m, which is pretty modest, you’d see more people show up at the park.
The Brewers have the smallest media market of all 30 teams.
Wrong…. way wrong.
And let’s not forget that the Pirates, along with the Giants, have one of the two most beautiful stadiums in MLB.
Richard, Please stop posting repetitive posts. Please stop hijacking threads. Please stop posting inaccurate material and facts. Please stop ruining message boards.
How much of that would overlap with Cleveland
As bad as the Pirates have been, a contender will turn that market around. Big if.
Pittsburgh would be an amazing city for baseball of they had an owner that cared.
The Ownership of the Cardinals is currently questionable. Whereas — Bill DeWitt Jr. has actually had a hood run as the primary owner of the Cardinals.
However, as he transfers the leadership of the Cardinals ownership more and more to his son, Bill DeWitt III, the quality of the team has f Stunk to an all time low !!!
The younger DeWitt doesn’t possess the “Want to” to obtain, retain and develop quality players to always have a major league team, capable of contending for a National League Championship such as his father has.
Bill DeWitt III’s attitude is to only try to develop Star quality players out of their Farm System and spend no money doing it. Furthermore —- DeWitt III’s philosophy is to only build s as team up enough to end as season as on over .500, to possibly win the last Wild Card position or the Central Division. That’s it. His Goals are far below those of his fathers.
Just as when Augustus Busch Jr. passed away and left the ball team to his son,
Busch III, his interest was do different that he sold the team!!!
That may be exactly what should happen with the DeWitts right now—— because of the low philosophies and championship desire of Bill DeWitt III.
And now I’m jealous of the Rays.
Someday, HHJJ, someday…
Awesome. I assume this real estate developer will handle all stadium building, land procurement and funding on his own. No need for the public to be involved in this professionals business.
While I agree with you, there’s never been a team that didn’t divide the stadium deal between the ownership and the public tax. To hold out because of that would be stupid because it’s not likely to change.
I think he was joking
I remember reading that the original Yankee Stadium, dodger Stadium, and Oracle Park were built with 100% private funding. Though the teams might have got deals on the land from the government.
Tax payers shouldn’t be OK with funding stadiums for billionaires. If taxpayers are paying for the stadium to be built, they should own a part of the team that profits off of it.
None of those was built 100% privately funded. All required hundreds of millions in today’s money in land and infrastructure from the taxpayers.
LA kicked 1800 families who had been there for generations out of their homes after taking it through eminent domain and then gave the land away to Walter O’Malley for free to build Dodger Stadium. On top of that the taxpayers paid for changes to the freeway system and other infrastructure that would be worth nearly $1 billion today.
The Giants were given the land to build what is now Oracle Park on. It was estimated that the land was worth $110 million at that time. In today’s dollars that’s more than $300 million.
I agree that taxpayers should not foot the bill for stadiums. They never CREATE revenue, they just shift it from other areas of the community and put that money in billionaires pockets. At the same time, the examples you used of stadiums were not privately financed. All took considerable sums of taxpayer dollars and resources.
The New Yankee stadium was built with private funding.
Regardless he’s right. Stadiums shouldn’t be paid for with public funds. It’s social welfare for billionaires.
As long as Nashville provides some land, yes.
This needs to happen.
Let’s goooooo get him out of here!!!
I really hope they don’t go to Jacksonville
No chance of that.
He does business in Jacksonville already, so I’m sure he knows better.
Orlando seems far more likely
Nashville is the sleeper choice, fellas.
That’s the only choice now that Vegas is already off the table
In an air-conditioned dome?
Jacksonville Rays sounds horrible compared to the nfl team jaguars
Sternburg has previously said that he won’t sell to anyone who’d move the team.
our stadium has a hole in it
our largest contract ever went to a player facing charges with a 14-year-old and just added a firmarm charge
our renovation renderings didn’t work
do you want the team?
????? At least attempt to make a relative comment. Geesch!
Stadium does have a hole in it, doesn’t really matter bc any new ownership would know a new stadium is a must for the future and this stadium is a short term obstacle. Moot point.
The biggest contract isn’t even being paid out right now; and will more than likely be voided entirely if he is charged, which is 99% going to happen. A 2nd moot point.
I just don’t even get what the point of your comment is. Just watch the success of the Bucs and Bolts. A successful sports franchise is something that can be done in the city of Tampa. Why wouldn’t someone wanna buy it?
Everyone involved in the league has to be excited about this
Yes, when the Rays’ stadium problem gets settled, they can move on with expansion and realignment. MLB is eager to realign into Eastern and Western leagues, like the NHL and NBA.
If I owned the Rays, I could make it a much better franchise. Going off the top of my head for starters, their name is awful and their logo isn’t much better. Florida is known for their alligators. Why not call the team “The Jaws” with a logo of an Alligator with its mouth wide open? Or even a Shark with its mouth wide open? I’m giving out this advice for free, meanwhile they probably pay their advertising department millions per year
Have you taken your meds today?
The Frames! Great avatar.
Um… if you were going to change the logo to a shark or an alligator, wouldn’t it just make more sense to call them the Tampa Bay Sharks or Tampa Bay Gators? Just saying.
How dare you question @LFGMets. He’s his own marketing think tank, chief branding strategist, focus group, and owns NYC’s Madison Avenue. The people have spoken.
@YankeesBleacherCreature If I ran a team with a payroll like the Yankees, Mets, or Dodgers, my team would lose at most 40 games per year. Not only that, but I could think of all the advertising ideas on my own. I’ve seen what these teams put out their, and its awful. Especially the Yankees. I’m guessing your a fan of the Michael Kay Show? I listen to that if I need to wake up early for bed, its so bad that it puts me to sleep
Yea you’re definitely faking this schitzo act
@sfes your just jealous that my ideas are original and that I’m rarely wrong about anything
You’re in fact always wrong and dooming a team during one of their best regular seasons ever.
They actually have 2 logo meanings. 1 is a fish and the other is a beam of sunlight, both of which exist in Florida.
1.7 Billion with a B?
Does this sale come with or without Parachute?
Does it include a stadium?
And of course, I have to ask this? Do you get Kielbasa?
Why do people get excited when one billionaire replaces another? Do you really think he is going to be THAT different? He is not going to spend every penny he has on the team, billionaires do not become billionaires that way. It is an investment for him and he might start out spending a little more, but he is still in the same Tampa market that has not really supported the team for 30 years. Now if he moves the team to Nashville or Charlotte, they might have something, but if they stay in Tampa (or move to Jacksonville) it will just be more of the same.
Maybe because when your owner is a billionaire that doesnt spend.. you might get one that will!
When you are only averaging 10,000 fans a game in your minor league stadium and that is not really a big drop from when you played in your big league stadium, no owner is going to spend a lot of money on that team. These guys do not become billionaire because they throw their money away.
Couldn’t agree more. I’ve been saying this as a big Rays fan, look at the marlins? All this hype and oh he’s gonna spend he’s gonna spend and then they tear it all down to run it like the Rays… yes the Rays owner sucks for not spending money but nobody can say he’s not committed to winning. He has the number 1 front office and still gives extensions to the front office and Kevin cash. You look at teams like the Rockies and pirates and marlins and reds and these other teams that spend more but don’t invest into what it takes to win. Nobody can say the Rays owner isn’t about winning. Cheap yes, uncompetitive? No.
Because just maybe, the new owner will provide an average MLB stadium experience with functioning storm drains and without a giant hole in the roof?
For who? The Rays don’t have a big enough fan base in that area. It will ALWAYS be a Yankees town. If the Rays move, they have a chance. Otherwise, they will always be a secondary team in their own city.
Just about anywhere in Florida would be better than where they are now. If I were the owner I’d be looking at Orlando or Tampa (actual Tampa, not the bay of Tampa) as the only viable places in the state.
The problem with Tampa, and Florida in general, is that many other big league teams play Spring Training there and have built in fan bases in the area. There are more Yankees fans in Tampa than there are Rays fans and that will always be the case because the Yankees were there before the Rays. Only a couple years, but still. Spring Training towns are not like minor league towns, teams stay there forever. And most of the residents in the area are retired from the northeast as well. It’s just not a place to try and build something from scratch.
The problem with attendance for the Rays is and always has been the same one, location. Its hard to get to the area of St Petersburg where the Trop is located. On a weekday its over an hour to get through rush hour traffic to get there. Until the last couple of years there was absolutely nothing to do close to the ballpark other than the game. It was a blighted area. Not crime filled, just in need of redevelopment.
Put a stadium in Tampa proper, closer for the majority of the population and in an area where you have to cross fewer bridges and they will draw. Maybe not like the Dodgers or Padres, but they will draw more fans than is possible being in St Petersburg.
For a fanbase of a team that never spends, spending in the short term is something to be excited about. The Orioles have almost doubled their payroll from last year.
Also, if you have one of the worst owners in the league, if the next one is just average then you have made a big improvement. This doesn’t need to fix everything to be a move in the right direction
And how has THAT worked out for the Orioles?
Poorly. I can’t imagine the Rays FO would make the mistake of giving 41 year old Charlie Morton 15 million.
Hardly an argument against a team having more money to spend being a positive thing as a fan. No Oriole fan misses Angelos
The new owner, if he actually buys after due diligence, will see the profit margin and make the same decisions.
Most fans have no clue why their team can’t spend a fortune and other teams can.
Manitees!
The next owner will move to team to Jacksonville and play at the Jags stadium Bob Nightingale said so
Jacksonville is a dump.
What? You’ve got something against highways, strip malls, and Applebee’s?
Sternberg last month: I will never sell.
Sternberg now: Yes give me $1.7B.
Reality, bruh. A private sale is not for public consumption and commentary.
That is indeed a good example of public posturing in advance of negotiations. When money is involved, people rarely say the flat truth
Nothing will change unless they relocate the team.
Yes, to Tampa proper. Baseball is a huge draw in the Tampa area. The Rays are not in Tampa.
To anyone who listens to JP Peterson on Fanstream, we knew that this was close. Nothing is 100% yet because of who Stu is, but this is fantastic news meaning that they’re not going anywhere. Fanstream mentioned for the past several months that there were a few local groups ready, just needed the go ahead from Sternburg.
Move the team to Nashville
That was the talk a few years ago.
The Braves ownership says no.
That’s not bad. You buy a team for $200M, get the city to fund your stadium and MLB to fund your roster. Then you cash out 20 years later 8xing your money with minimal risk.
Good gig if you can find it…
No thanks. Prima Donna employee’s in a ridiculously strong us v them culture with a strong union. Fan base publicly hammering you every little move you make. Huge disparity when it comes to revenue possibilities thereby making it an uneven competition.
Good luck to the brave souls that take that on. Not for me at all.
Making money is pretty easy if you start out with a lot of it already.
Little bit of work involved in those 20 years. It’s not exactly a sit and forget investment. I think people forget about that part.
I hope this is a good thing for the team and the area. The $1.7B price is higher than Forbes values the franchise. So Sternberg will be cashing in big time on the sale. Now many will think no way the new owner could be worse than Sternberg, but sure could. As a distant observer sure seems like a good time to try a different hand at the wheel. Hope this sale goes through and hope this brings a better baseball experience to the Bay Area.
Florida is for Spring Training, I understand why MLB took a chance on Miami but I will never understand why they put a team in Tampa. It’s a shame for the people who are fans of this team, but it’s obvious to everyone that they’d be better off in another southern market. Nashville, Raleigh, Charlotte being the most obvious. If they do stay in Florida then Orlando is the only thing that makes sense.
@Lifetime – You are spot on. Although at least they now have a head start when it comes to developing a fanbase. It takes two to three generations to build one, and every market down there is impacted by the fact that so many come from elsewhere and have their own affilitations, along with the fact that every spring training area has a built-in base of fans for that team.
From the chatter, one might think that Orlando is the choice if they stay in FLA but who knows.
Sternberg was in it for the money, but at least they managed to put together a series of front office personnel that managed competitive teams despite the financial handicaps and simply atrocious ballpark combined with pathetic attendance. No guarantees with the new guys either.
Tampa is a bigger media market than Miami. Its also bigger than Nashville, Raleigh, and Charlotte.
Yes, these guys don’t understand that the media market is more important than the fans in the stands.
That said, with streaming over cable Tampa may fall short in the $$$ dept.
That’s why Charlotte and Nashville will get major push back from the Braves. Those two areas are Brave country.
1.5 Bil return. And could go higher with a Bidding War. Nice.
Maybe MLB could take the crazy step of vetting the new ownership so we don’t just trade a Sternberg/Nutting/Fisher/Reinsdorf for another.
Most of them are only interested in the sale at top dollars going through because it increases the valuations of their own franchise. If you had $2B to make the Rays purchase, they’ll probably approve to sell to you provided you hire an outside management firm to take over.
Why? What MLB looks at is not what fans look at when it comes to admittance to the country club.
The question will be if the sale goes through will you have an owner with a better plan or maybe be smart enough to move to Nashville or a stronger market.
There won’t be a move to a different state. Manfred has stated that he wants the expansion ball rolling by the time he retires in 2029.
The league breathes a sign of relief
Nationals next
Just send them to Nashville already.
I’m not sure why people think that new ownership will be better.
Here we go again…
The Pittsburgh Pirates should move to Charlotte, NC; Orlando, FL; Austin, TX; San Antonio, TX; or Portland, OR as soon as the team’s lease on PNC Park expires and it is, thereby, released from its obligation to stay in Pittsburgh.
Those metropolitan areas are all larger markets than Pittsburgh, do not have an MLB team, and are growing in population while Pittsburgh is decreasing.in population.
There is no reason for the Pirates to remain in a region that has long proven to be a bad market for baseball.
You need to get a life. All you do is bark your hated of Pittsburgh.
Have a bad experience there or something? Give it a rest already.
You can’t prove anything with a team that has had only 4 seasons with winning records over the past 32 years (and will certainly be 4 out of 33 counting this year). As someone else pointed out, the fans do show up in Pittsburgh when they actually put a quality product on the field.
The fiasco that is MLB in Florida needs to be done. Spring training and minor leagues are fine but there is no data that shows fans will show up. It doesn’t matter the product you put on the field or that amount spent on a new stadium. The Florida teams are luxury tax recipients and AAAA Minor leagues for other teams to trade with. Move the Marlins and Rays to places where fans will show up. Billion dollar stadiums should be built in places that will make the game better and expand interest. When only 12,000 people showed up to a Rays playoff game last season, that felt like the final straw. Don’t built it, they won’t come.
Move the Rays to Tampa and fans would show up. As the article states, the biggest problem with attendance in the Tampa Bay area is that the team is NOT in Tampa, its in the difficult to get to St Petersburg.
Television and radio ratings are excellent. The Tampa Bay Rays have fans. Tropicana Field was antiquated when the team first started playing there. It’s been the worst stadium in baseball, every single season of its existence.
If it weren’t for two massive hurricanes, within a week of each other, they would have already broken ground on that amazing stadium plan that has now fallen apart. It came down to money and the current ownership just does not have the finances to do what it takes to build a competitive long-term team in the area.
There’s no reason to believe that, with a state of the art home, and even a middle of the road payroll, the baseball can’t survive in the Tampa Bay area. It’s a big Media market.
Some people think that the stadium has to be in Tampa rather than St. Petersburg. That might be somewhat true, but the population of St. Petersburg keeps growing and growing. Hopefully we wind up with a new owner with “$pit Tons” of money. I’m talking LIQUID, not just “wealthy”
Its interesting that while all three of the investors named have ties to Florida, none have direct ties to Tampa. There may be other minority investors involved that have close Tampa ties, but these three are not residents nor are their businesses HQ’d there. The Rays may be on the move.
Steve, Tampa is not a small media market, its the 11th largest in the nation. Also, the Rays control the Orlando media market for baseball and Orlando is the 15th largest, so its actually a very large media market. Combined at over 4 million TV households its the 4th largest behind Chicago. That is why MLB is so intent on keeping a team there,
“Sternberg has owned the Rays for more than two decades years.”
Uh, no. Apparently nobody edits these articles.
You’re hired! The starting pay is $0.00.
Are these investors delusional?
The Rays are in a market that cannot gate and cannot make money.
Plus the USA economy is starting to tank and will enter depression land as the USA dollar hyper inflates. That means sports franchises will land at 5-10% of their value than they are today. It is not if, it is when. Maybe 4-5 years? Trump can’t save the USA economic meltdown, no one can. This is economics 401.
Don’t do it.
No. The Rays are in the 11th largest media market int he nation and also control the 15th largest in Orlando. The MSA is the 17th largest in population and the fastest growing among MLB cities.
They have the misfortune of playing in a really, really bad stadium that is located in a really, really hard location to get to for the fans. Moving to Tampa proper solves that and keeps them in a huge media market.
If the current USA macroeconomics weren’t what they are I might agree with you. I think the investors can buy it for pennies on the dollar sooner than later. Patience is the key. Wait a few years. No one else is lining up to buy this club at the moment. They are bidding against themselves.
Why do you care??????
If they build in Tampa and St Pete, it will continue to be a failure. It is just not a baseball town, and neither was Miami.
jimmertee;
You must get your propaganda from the CBC.
Fact is that US economic figures are growing; employment has picked up; inflation has started to come down particularly thanks to gas prices; and this is just the beginning. Depression? LOL The US is on track to having the strongest economy it its history over the next 3-4 years.
Meanwhile, your country is living off the proceeds from western providences which the government has been straggling to such a point that the people in those providences have started a Secessionist Movement.
Have been big fan of Danielle Smith for 3-4 years now. Follow Canadian news some. The woman is truly brilliant with common sense and a strong will. Wish she could run for Governor in one of the largest states in the US.
$1.7B for a team that can’t get anyone to attend their games even when they’re good? Not bad
Build a new stadium in Ybor City.
This Rays fan couldn’t be happier to hear it. With time, it has become more and more obvious that our owners couldn’t realistically afford to own an MLB team. Notice how they purchased the team for $200mil and are selling for $1.7bil? Owning a major league team doesn’t mean making massive profits every season. There are better investments in the world than professional sports teams, but if you’re willing to put up the money to feel the competitive team and hopefully win, one day when you sell the team… THAT’S when you make your BIG money!
We were so preoccupied with trying to turn a profit do on a year to year basis (or at least not LOSE money), that our team was always at a disadvantage (bottom 3-5 in payroll). Hopefully the new owner not only understands what it takes to consistently win in the show, but they are “liquid” enough and willing to di what it takes! You’re already filthy rich if you’re buying a team, so don’t worry about year-to-year profits… Look what happens when you sell the team!
It’s not all complaints about current ownership, though. Have to be fair. Since 2010, the Tampa Bay Rays have the fourth highest regular season winning percentage. Says so much about the Management, players, farm system, on down to scouting, etc…
We’ve been lovable underdogs that have stood tow to toe against the Yankees and Red Sox in our division. But now it’s time to get a real stadium, hopefully a middle of the road pay roll, oh….and one more thing. Let’s FINALLY get a World Series Ring!!!!
“Have to be fair. Since 2010, the Tampa Bay Rays have the fourth highest regular season winning percentage. Says so much about the Management, players, farm system, on down to scouting, etc…”
TBRaysBucsBolts;
Correct.
Mr. Sternberg made his money running hedge funds in NYC. To be successful in that business at the time, one had to be brilliant in working with numbers.
When Mr. Sternberg bought the Rays he worked with Andrew Friedman to build a Baseball Ops system that is a mix of fundamental baseball and analytics in order to put together rosters they could afford based on their revenues. For all the ridiculous accolades Billy Beane and his Moneyball gets, truth be told it has been Mr. Sternberg’s Rays that have truly revolutionized MLB to a point where most teams have copied the Rays approach to some degree, and some teams point-blank totally copying it. (Not to mention how many organizations poach the Rays FO people and coaches.)
All the baseball-challenged commentators on here posting that now the Rays will spend and be successful, will be posting in 3-4 years asking why the Rays stopped being competitive. Start here—> Name a bad long-term player contract the Rays have gotten stuck with that limited what they could do one year in putting together a team.
The Rays should be moved out of Tampa Bay.
They have been a consistently winning team since 2018 and have always been at the bottom of the league in attendance.
To the complaints that they don’t spend on payroll, I say, “So, what?” They win.
They’ll stay in Florida. As to where? My guess is it’s 100000% not going to be St. Pete
Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville? Far more likely.
My guess is the developer will do what developers do… get a stadium with all the stuff around it to happen. My guess is Tampa and Orlando OVER Jacksonville.
Of course, Jacksonville has a large stadium that could warehouse the team for a few years. I can’t see them staying an in minor league park again.
If only the headline said, “Pirates’ Owner Bob Nutting in “Advanced” Talks to Sell Team.” A Pirates’ fan can only dream.
So, potentially, the Rays won’t continue to be the minor league team that readies players for major league service? What will MLB do without this pipeline?
The Pirates have done that for years for the NL. Skenes, Jared Jones, Ke’Bryan Hayes, ONeil Cruz to name a few will only get better once they’re traded from Pittsburgh to a team that wants to win.
They just need a new stadium. Sell the team if necessary but you gotta also leave the Monstrosity Tropicana Field too.
Sternberg skillfully bought on the cheap, worked to get revenue sharing rules changes, and got other teams to pay for his roster. Smart man.
As a Ray’s fan, I would prefer the Team just move since for one instance, they haven’t provided us fans with a decent venue since the beginning. Frankly, another state/city would be besr.