Lodi News-Sentinel

MLB turns up heat on Oakland before ballpark vote

- Shayna Rubin

Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred turned up the heat on Oakland officials Tuesday, saying the city council’s vote next week on the Howard Terminal ballpark project “will determine the fate of baseball in Oakland” and that to consider relocation a bluff would be “a mistake.”

Manfred, speaking to the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America before Tuesday night’s All-Star Game in Denver, said a negative vote on July 20 by the city council could spell the end of baseball in Oakland.

“John Fisher has done everything I’ve asked him to do in terms of keeping the A’s in Oakland and more than I asked him to do in terms of financial commitment,” Manfred said, referring to the A’s owner. “So we’re going to know one way or another what’s going to happen in Oakland in the next couple of months. If you can’t get a ballpark, the relocation process, whether it’s

Las Vegas or a broader array of cities that are considered, will take on more pace.”

City leaders said in meetings last week that they want more assurances from the A’s on the matter of affordable housing and community benefits. But Manfred framed next week’s vote in black-and-white terms:

“This is the decision point for Oakland as whether they want to have Major League Baseball going forward,” he said.

Requests for comment from Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and other local officials had gone unanswered by the close of business Tuesday.

Longtime sports executive Andy Dolich, who spent 15 years in the A’s front office, responded to Manfred in equally stark terms.

“This is a blunt-force instrument that is supposed to scare Oakland into doing something it couldn’t do — even if it could,” Dolich said. “Right now the A’s are putting as much pressure as they can on a city which has pressure from so many different areas — none of them having anything to do with baseball — that every city is facing. You’re supposed to be focusing all your energy on a time when life has changed for citizens of

the city in so many ways.”

Oakland officials have asked that as part of any deal, the A’s agree to stay in Oakland for 45 years. To date, the A’s so have been willing to commit to only 20 years. The A’s also want to waive a requiremen­t that 15% of the housing built at the ballpark be affordable housing.

A group that includes Fisher and president Dave Kaval explored possible sites for relocation in the Las Vegas area last month and made another trip last week. The group also has plans to visit Las Vegas on July 21, the day after the city council vote.

“I suspect if they get a yes . ... Travel plans are a fluid thing,” Manfred said. “If

they don’t get a yes, they need to figure something out.”

Kaval said in May that the A’s quest to build a ballpark and developmen­t at Howard Terminal is on a “parallel path” with their search for a viable location in Las Vegas. The A’s have identified at least 20 viable site in Southern Nevada to build a ballpark developmen­t, according to reports.

On Tuesday, Manfred warned these fact-finding missions are serious and the A’s could soon be told to explore other markets.

“Las Vegas is a viable alternativ­e for a major league club, and there are other viable alternativ­es that I haven’t turned the A’s loose to even explore at this point,” Manfred said. “Thinking about this as a bluff is a mistake.”

The A’s and MLB have said the Coliseum

site where the current ballpark sits is not a viable site to build a new one, and Manfred explained the league sees the joint tenancy between the A’s and the city as the biggest complicati­on because the city is hosting other suitors for the other half of the property.

“There’s more than location involved in the viability of the site. Let’s start with the fact that the county and city were joint tenants there,” Manfred said. “Twin tenancies are a very complicate­d situation. The city’s gone down a different path in terms of entertaini­ng sale of their piece of it to other bidders. It’s just not viable at this point. You’ve got other people looking to develop the site. And most fundamenta­lly, John Fisher is going to invest over a billion dollars. He thinks the place he has the greatest likelihood of success is Howard Terminal.”

 ?? JUSTIN EDMONDS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Commission­er of Baseball Robert D. Manfred Jr. speaks at the All-Star Workout Day on Monday in Denver.
JUSTIN EDMONDS/GETTY IMAGES Commission­er of Baseball Robert D. Manfred Jr. speaks at the All-Star Workout Day on Monday in Denver.

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