Santa Cruz Sentinel

Former A's slugger Jackson says he was denied chance to buy team

- By Laurence Miedema

Reggie Jackson helped put the Oakland A's on the baseball map as a charismati­c superstar player in the 1970s, but the Hall of Famer this week said he had designs on another role with the franchise — team owner.

The 76-year-old Jackson was on the “Howard Stern Show” and said that money was no object for his group, which he said included Bill Gates and Paul Allen, and he believed a deal was all but done when the A's were up for sale in the early 2000s. Jackson suggests he had an agreement in place with then-A's owner Ken Hofmann, and is “absolutely” convinced then-MLB commission­er Bud Selig made sure the deal didn't happen — paving the way for the A's to be sold to a group led by Selig's fraternity brother at the University of Wisconsin,

Lew Wolff, in 2005 for $180 million.

“It broke my heart,” Jackson said during a wide-ranging interview with Stern on Wednesday. “I went into depression for about six months.”

Jackson said his group, which also included John McCaw, the former partowner

of the NHL's Vancouver Canucks, had enough money that, “I could have bought the National League.”

Jackson said, “In writing, I sent a letter to Ken Hofmann, who owned the A's, that I'm willing to pay $25 million more than any bid that you get. Bud said to me, he said, `Reggie, stay with me. I'll guide you through. I'll get this done for you.'

“And then all of a sudden it came out that the A's were sold to a guy by the name of Lew Wolff — Bud Selig's college buddy.”

Selig could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Frustrated A's fans can only wonder what the franchise might look like now if Jackson and his group of deep pockets were in charge.

Wolff sold his shares in the team in 2016, making John Fisher the sole principal owner. With Opening Day just a week away, the team heads into another season of uncertaint­y — the A's lease at the Coliseum runs out after next season, there has been no movement on a potential new stadium at Howard Terminal, and the dark cloud of a potential move to Las Vegas continues to hover over the franchise.

 ?? CINDY ORD — GETTY IMAGES ?? Reggie Jackson visits SiriusXM's `The Howard Stern Show' at SiriusXM Studios on Wednesday in New York.
CINDY ORD — GETTY IMAGES Reggie Jackson visits SiriusXM's `The Howard Stern Show' at SiriusXM Studios on Wednesday in New York.

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