Minnesota Twins owner Carl Pohlad has signed a letter of intent to sell the
team pending approval of a new ballpark in downtown St. Paul. If the deal goes
through, sports moguls Glen Taylor and Robert Naegele will head up the new
ownership group. Taylor and Naegele are, respectively, the principal owners of
the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Minnesota Wild. A sale would give them
control of three of the Twin Cities' four major professional sports teams.
FROM THE CHEERS
during last night's announcement, one might have
thought the Twins were already playing in a new outdoor ballpark, and not
just playing, but heading to the World Series. Despite the fanfare, the news
was considerably more mundane.
The agreement comes nearly a week after last Friday's missed
deadline, and the deal is a fragile one. It would unravel if Coleman's
stadium push collapses. Current Twins owner Carl Pohlad wasn't available last
night to comment on the deal. Taylor and Naegele declined to discuss the
details, including a potential sale price, believed to be roughly $120
million for a team that cost Pohlad $36 million in 1984. Nor would they say
which of the two investors would own a greater share of the enterprise.
Rather, the announcement focused on what Naegele called the clearing of a major
hurdle.
Naegele says there are three others to clear: voters, legislature, and governor.
Hurdle two will be finding support among St. Paul residents. The
mayor is asking them to approve an increase in the city sales tax to fund
one-third of a $325 million ballpark for the Twins. Polls show St. Paul voters
oppose the mayor's ballot initiative nearly 2-1. Coleman says identifying
new owners is an attempt to defuse some of the bitter feelings toward the
current ownership. Although the Twins won two World Series championships
under Pohlad's watch, his public image was wounded during what many
Minnesotans considered a heavy-handed attempt to secure state funding for a
ballpark in 1997.
In addition to the city's one-third contribution, the state would
cover another third of the stadium cost and the team would pay the rest with
revenues generated by the facility. Opponents of public funding for a new
ballpark who were on hand for the announcement say a change in ownership won't
automatically precipitate a change in voter sentiment.
Even if stadium-boosters can use the new ownership group to win
voter approval in November, it may make little difference when the plan arrives
at the state Legislature. The fractious stadium push in 1997 has left even
previous ballpark supporters reluctant to resume the debate, and opponents
such as DFLer Matt Entenza say the plan has little chance of success at the Capitol. On
the other hand, prospective buyer Glen Taylor is a former Republican Senate
minority leader with a firm understanding of legislative deal-making.
But a key opponent says Taylor's expertise and Capitol connections
won't be enough. John Marty is a DFL state senator from Roseville who was
instrumental in defeating the 1997 proposals. He admits Taylor has friends at the Capitol, but says in the end, it won't matter.
And if Coleman, Naegele, and Taylor do leap the next two hurdles,
they may find the last one the tallest of the three, literally, if not
figuratively. Governor Jesse Ventura has already made clear his opposition to
tax-payer supported sports facilities.