Chattanooga Times Free Press

St. Louis sues NFL

- BY JIM SALTER

ST. LOUIS — The city of St. Louis filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the National Football League over the Rams’ relocation to Los Angeles, alleging the league violated its own relocation guidelines and enriched itself at the expense of the community it left behind.

The move came 15 months after the team departed. St. Louis is joined in the lawsuit by St. Louis County and the region’s sports authority. The lawsuit filed in St. Louis Circuit Court names the NFL, all 32 teams and their owners, and it seeks unspecifie­d but “extensive” damages and restitutio­n.

The NFL says there is “no legitimate basis” for the lawsuit. A spokesman for the league, Brian McCarthy, said it worked diligently with local and state officials in a process he calls “honest and fair.”

The Rams moved from Los Angeles to St. Louis prior to the 1995 season, lured in part by a new taxpayer-built domed stadium. Stan Kroenke, a real estate billionair­e and native of Missouri, was minority owner of the team until purchasing it outright in 2010, two years after the death of longtime majority owner Georgia Frontiere.

The suit claims that it wasn’t long afterward that Kroenke began plotting a move, despite public comments from him and team executive Kevin Demoff that the Rams hoped to remain in St. Louis for the long term.

“In the years leading up to the Rams relocation request, Rams officials decided to move the team and confidenti­ally determined that they would be interested in exploiting any opportunit­y to do so,” the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit notes that since St. Louis officials weren’t aware a move was essentiall­y a done deal, they spent millions of dollars developing plans for a new riverfront stadium project aimed at retaining the Rams.

“The Rams never intended to engage in good faith negotiatio­ns with St. Louis,” the lawsuit says.

In February 2014, Kroenke bought land in Inglewood, Calif. According to the lawsuit, Demoff said it was “not a piece of land that’s any good for a football stadium” when asked about the purchase.

“The size and the shape aren’t good for a football stadium,” Demoff said then.

But the lawsuit notes that after league owners approved the move in January 2016, Demoff told an interviewe­r he recalled Kroenke calling him after inspecting the California property in 2013 and saying it was “an unbelievab­le site” for a football stadium. The lawsuit says Demoff said the call was one of the “moments in your life you never forget.”

The Inglewood stadium is expected to open in 2019. The Rams are playing at Memorial Coliseum until then.

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