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MLB OWNERS APPROVE SALE OF BALTIMORE ORIOLES TO DAVID RUBENSTEIN

By Chelsea Janes
March 27, 2024 at 12:25 p.m. EDT

MLB owners approved David Rubenstein as the new controlling owner of the
Baltimore Orioles. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)

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Major League Baseball’s owners on Wednesday unanimously approved David
Rubenstein as the new controlling owner of the Baltimore Orioles, a day before
the team’s 2024 season begins. The vote, conducted during a conference call,
means that for the first time in three decades, the Orioles will have a managing
owner not named Angelos on Opening Day.



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The deal the owners approved gives Rubenstein, a co-founder of the Carlyle Group
private equity firm and longtime Washington-area philanthropist, and his
prominent minority investors 40 percent of a franchise that was valued at $1.7
billion for the purpose of the transaction. Under the terms, current controlling
owner John Angelos agreed to cede that position to Rubenstein, and his family
agreed to give Rubenstein the option to buy the rest of the team once family
patriarch Peter Angelos died.

For that reason, the timing of Rubenstein’s takeover felt almost preordained.
Peter Angelos, the self-made billionaire and senior figure of the family that
purchased the Orioles in 1993, died Saturday after a lengthy illness. He was 94.

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Out of respect for the family’s mourning, Rubenstein and his group have not yet
spoken to the family to hammer out the specifics of purchasing the rest of the
team, but a deal seems likely to come sooner than later. Angelos’s death
eliminated the need for his family to pay capital gains taxes on the profit it
made on the franchise since he bought it for $173 million in 1993. Given the
sale price, those taxes would have cost the family hundreds of millions of
dollars.

In a statement, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred thanked the Angelos family “for
their many years of service to the game and the communities of Baltimore” and
said that “as a Baltimore native and a lifelong fan of the team, [Rubenstein] is
uniquely suited to lead the Orioles moving forward.”



Regardless of when the deal for the remaining 60 percent is consummated, it will
be Rubenstein who sits in the owner’s box at Camden Yards on Thursday afternoon
when the Orioles open one of their more promising seasons of the past 30 years.
They will do so in the aftermath of stunning tragedy in Rubenstein’s hometown
after the Francis Scott Key Bridge, visible from the Orioles’ executive offices,
collapsed early Tuesday. The Orioles canceled a scheduled public workout Tuesday
because of it.

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Rubenstein, 74, had been interested in buying the Orioles for several years. He
worked on a potential deal with Washington billionaire Ted Leonsis in which
Rubenstein would invest in Leonsis’s Monumental Sports & Entertainment to help
that group purchase the Orioles, though that deal never came together. Leonsis
then focused his attention on the Washington Nationals, for which he bid more
than $2 billion in 2022. But by then, Rubenstein — who was also said to have
interest in the Nationals, according to multiple people familiar with his
thinking — had decided to pursue a team with a new group.

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Eventually, Rubenstein compiled a group that included Ares Management private
equity firm co-founder Michael Arougheti and several prominent investors with
Baltimore-area ties, including Orioles legend Cal Ripken Jr., Johns Hopkins
graduate and former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg and former Baltimore mayor
Kurt Schmoke. That group will begin its stewardship of the Orioles mere hours
before the first pitch of their 2024 season.

“Baltimore was always my first interest because I grew up in Baltimore. I was
raised there, I was educated there,” Rubenstein said in a recent phone
interview. “It’s much more appealing to me for many reasons. And also, I think
the team is actually in extremely good shape despite the fact that they didn’t
have a lot of money in recent years.”

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For years, Baltimore fans expressed frustration about how much the Angelos
family was willing to invest in its on-field product. According to Cot’s
Baseball Contracts, the Orioles have not had a team payroll in MLB’s upper half
since 2017, and they haven’t had a payroll ranking in the sport’s top third in
more than a decade. Last year, as they won the American League East with a team
built largely around players who had yet to hit free agency or even arbitration,
the Orioles finished with the second-smallest payroll in MLB.

“I don’t want to prejudge what we’ll do [in terms of spending],” Rubenstein
said, “but what we’ll do is follow the recommendations of [General Manager] Mike
Elias and his team.”

Speaking of Elias and the Orioles’ vaunted baseball operations department,
Rubenstein said he does not plan to make major changes when he takes over — nor
to be particularly hands-on when it comes to baseball decisions.

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“If you’ve got the general manager of the year in the American League and the
manager of the year in the American League, do you really think they need my
advice on who to play?” Rubenstein said, referring to Elias and Baltimore
Manager Brandon Hyde. “My thinking is, you guys are the best in the business,
I’m here to support you. I’m not going to be meddling in a lot of things that
are not my area of expertise.”

One thing Rubenstein does plan to involve himself in, however, is finding
resolution to the decades-long headache that is the MASN dispute. Though he
would not offer specifics about what a resolution might look like for the
regional sports network that also broadcasts Nationals games, he made clear he
hopes to do what the Lerner and Angelos families could not and devise a more
palatable arrangement.

“I think all of baseball, and all the fans of Baltimore and Washington, would
like to see this resolved in a friendly, amicable way in the near future,”
Rubenstein said, “and that’s my goal.”

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Solving that dispute should never be easier than it would be now, when the cable
revenue at the heart of the dispute has shrunk to a fraction of its previous
size due to cord-cutting. Still, even without specifics of what a resolution
might look like, Rubenstein’s optimism represents a marked change in posture
from the Baltimore franchise, which might be all it takes. On the field and off,
a new Orioles era is already underway.

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