Sports

Business Leaders Supporting Oakland A's Call On City To Drop Lawsuit

SF Gate

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November 6, 2019

By Bay City News Service


A group of business leaders on Wednesday called on the Oakland City Council to drop the lawsuit the city filed aimed at blocking Alameda County from selling its half ownership of the Oakland Coliseum complex to the A's baseball team.

The news conference that the group called Town Business held in front of City Hall came after the City Council voted on Tuesday to enter into exclusive negotiations with the A's to sell the city's half of the Coliseum to the team.

However, the city still hasn't dropped the lawsuit it filed against the county on Sept. 27.

Alameda County Superior Court Judge Frank Rosech granted the city's request for a temporary restraining order at a hearing on Oct. 1 and is scheduled to have a hearing on Nov. 14 to hear arguments on whether the restraining order should be extended.

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Major League Soccer awards expansion team to Sacramento

Major League Soccer

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October 21, 2019

By Tom Bogert


After more than a few years of trying, Major League Soccer is coming to Sacramento.

California's capital city has been awarded an MLS expansion team with Sacramento Republic FC becoming the league's 29th team and beginning play in MLS in 2022. The club will build a new, $300 million, 20,100-seat soccer stadium in the downtown Railyards District.

“Major League Soccer continues to grow throughout North America and we are so proud to welcome Sacramento as our newest team,” Garber said in a statement. “For many years, soccer fans in Sacramento have passionately supported Republic FC and shown that the club deserves to be competing at the highest level. Thanks to the determined efforts and commitment of new owners Ron Burkle and Matt Alvarez along with the leadership of Mayor Darrell Steinberg, Sacramento will join MLS with a world-class soccer stadium that will transform the sport in California’s capital.”

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Op-Ed: Sports sector a great fit for ‘Opportunity Zones’

Sports Business Journal

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Nationals Park and its surrounding development played a key role in the revitalization of a long-blighted area of Washington, D.C. (Photo: Ballparks of Baseball)

By Rob Simmelkjaer and Kunal Merchant

June 17, 2019

When Nationals Park opened in Southeast Washington, D.C., in 2008, it was the centerpiece of a plan to revive a long-blighted section of the nation’s capital. Eleven years (and $670 million of public financing) later, the Anacostia neighborhood is widely seen as a triumph of urban development, with the ballpark just part of a revitalized area that includes a wide array of residential and commercial development.

It was this type of success story that was envisioned by policymakers and politicians when they included a provision in the new tax law called the “Investing in Opportunity Act” designed to attract private investment capital into economically distressed areas. The law allowed for the creation of more than 8,000 “Opportunity Zones” around the country — low-income census tracts designated by the governors of all 50 states.

Opportunity Zones were the brainchild of tech entrepreneur Sean Parker, whose think tank Economic Innovation Group helped write the policy. Parker recruited a rare bipartisan group of leaders in Washington, led by Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) to turn it into law. Here’s how it works:

  • A company or individual who sells any investment at a profit would normally be subject to a capital gains tax of either 15% or 20% of that profit.

  • Under the Opportunity Zone program, if that same investor reinvests the cash proceeds of that sale into a Qualified Opportunity Fund — a fund that invests in projects or businesses located within an Opportunity Zone — they get to both reduce that tax bill and defer it to years into the future.

  • Perhaps most significantly, any additional profits that an investor realizes from their subsequent Opportunity Zone investment may be completely tax free.

What does all this have to do with sports? Sports is among the industries best positioned to take advantage of this tax incentive. While the program is still in its infancy, we foresee at least four potential pathways for sports and Opportunity Zones to intersect:

1. Stadium and arena construction and renovation. Fourteen of 28 NFL stadiums (counting the new stadiums in Los Angeles and Las Vegas) sit within Opportunity Zones, with another five adjacent to zones (see chart). MLB, the NBA and NHL have 13, 12 and seven buildings in zones, respectively. Clubs looking to upgrade or replace their facilities could invest or raise capital using the benefits of the program. The private capital unlocked by this incentive could give clubs an alternative to public financing, which faces growing skepticism from elected leaders and taxpayers.

2. Ancillary mixed-use districts. The strategy of building retail, housing, office and hospitality destinations to complement arena and stadium projects is increasingly becoming core to the business models of sports teams, particularly when community expectations are high for venue projects to generate broader economic and community benefits on game and non-game days alike.

3. Youth sports complexes. These are another potential beneficiary. The last decade has witnessed a building boom of multisport youth facilities nationally, but there remains an acute shortage of places for kids to play in lower-income areas. Directing Opportunity Zone dollars to the creation of new youth sports facilities is consistent with the pro-social policy goals of the program, and could help stem the steady decline in youth sports participation that we have seen in these communities.

4. Sports-related operating businesses. While early Opportunity Zone investment has favored real estate, the program is primarily intended to provide patient and discounted capital to support businesses with the potential to create jobs in areas that need it most. If sports entrepreneurs are able to position ventures authentically in Opportunity Zone communities, emerging areas like esports, drone racing, sports media and tech, incubators and other models could show promise as well. (Sportsbooks and golf courses, it should be noted, are excluded from the program.)  

Investors and those seeking to raise investment capital need to know that the clock is ticking on this program. Investments in Qualified Opportunity Funds must be made by the end of 2019 to qualify for a 15% reduction of capital gains taxes for investments held at least seven years. The biggest economic benefit to investors, however, is the ability to achieve tax-free profits on Opportunity Zone investments that are held at least 10 years.

There is an estimated $6 trillion in unrealized capital gains currently sitting on paper in the U.S. Those dollars have the potential to transform struggling communities and create countless jobs. The sports industry has a chance to play a major role in this process while also realizing significant economic benefits. The opportunity of a lifetime beckons.

Rob Simmelkjaer is an attorney and a former executive and journalist at NBC Sports and ESPN.  In April 2019 he joined CapZone Impact Investments as a Senior Advisor.

Kunal Merchant is Managing Director of Lotus Advisory and Co-Founder of CalOZ, a non-profit trade organization focused on Opportunity Zones.

Green Sports Alliance Joins in Supporting the UN Sports for Climate Action Framework

Today the Green Sports Alliance (Alliance) launched “Playing for the Next Generation”, part of a campaign designed to encourage its members and partners to commit to the United Nation’s (UN) Sports for Climate Action Framework.

MLS to expand to 30 teams; St. Louis, Sacramento to make formal bids

LOS ANGELES -- MLS intends to expand to 30 teams, with teams 28 and 29 requiring an expansion fee of $200 million, commissioner Don Garber announced Thursday following a Board of Governors meeting.

Garber said the board had authorized his office to advance into exclusive discussions with St. Louis and Sacramento with an eye toward those two cities being the 28th and 29th teams.