The News (New Glasgow)

Multiple groups submit bids to buy Marlins

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Derek Jeter and Jeb Bush still haven’t touched all the bases in their bid to buy the Miami Marlins. Far from it.

Multiple groups have submitted bids to buy the team, and none has yet been accepted, baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred said. His comments came after Bloomberg reported a group led by former New York Yankees captain Jeter and former Florida Gov. Bush won an auction for the team with a US$1.3 billion bid.

“There are multiple groups interested in acquiring the Marlins,” Manfred said. “One of those groups is the Bush-Jeter group. When we have a resolution as to which bid is going to be accepted, we will announce that.”

Completion of any sale by Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria could take months and would require approval by at least 75 per cent of the major league teams. More than half of the winning bid could involve cash because of MLB’s debt service rule, meaning the Bush-Jeter group would need to raise a lot of money.

“You can rest assured that the acquiring group, whoever it turns out to be, will have a financial structure – meaning some debt and the rest equity – that is consistent with the rules that we have, most notably the debt service rule,” Manfred said. “And more important than complying with the rules, (that) puts the franchise in a position that it can operate effectivel­y. That’s really the commission­er’s office’s job in terms of approving any potential bidding group, and we are really focused on that issue with respect to the Marlins.”

The debt service rule was expanded under the new collective bargaining agreement to include club-supported debt incurred by the club or any clubrelate­d party.

Quogue Capital investment fund founder Wayne Rothbaum has also pursued the Marlins, and talks with him might be restarted if any deal with the Bushes and Jeter stalls. Joshua Kushner, whose older brother is an adviser to President Donald Trump, had a preliminar­y agreement to buy the team for $1.6 billion before breaking off negotiatio­ns.

Bush’s group includes his 33-year-old son, Jeb Jr., who has worked in politics and real estate. The Bushes and Jeter initially had competing interests in efforts to buy the team before joining forces.

Marlins manager Don Mattingly declined to discuss the possibilit­y of them joining forces in Miami.

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