The Capital

Leaning toward new lease

Governor and team chair John Angelos promise Camden Yards deal ‘soon’

- By Nathan Ruiz and Hayes Gardner

Orioles chairman John Angelos has repeatedly said that the Orioles will remain in Baltimore for years to come. Democrat Gov. Moore, a friend of Angelos’, has echoed the confidence, as have Mayor Brandon Scott and even MLB commission­er Rob Manfred.

The prospect of the Orioles relocating remains a remote one. But until promises become agreements, there could be a bit of apprehensi­on in Baltimore, where the Colts’ midnight move 39 years ago feels fresh for many.

The Orioles’ lease with the Maryland Stadium Authority, the owner of Oriole Park at Camden Yards and their landlord, is what officially binds the club to the city. In the lease, under the “no relocation” heading, a move by the ballclub is forbidden.

The lease — which has been in place since Oriole Park opened in 1992 — expires at the end of this year and in February, Angelos said he would “love to have [a new lease] as an All-Star break gift for everybody, really, in the community.” Despite his hopes, the All-Star break ends Friday and the Orioles remain without a lease beyond 2023.

In a joint statement Thursday from Moore and Angelos, the two sides did not provide particular­s on lease negotiatio­ns. Instead, they said, progress is being made on their “vision to expand and revitalize the Camden Yards campus.” Moore and the Orioles have previously said they aspire to “deliver a live, work, play theme” year-round at the ballpark and its surroundin­g area.

”We are determined to make it happen, and soon,” Thursday’s statement said.

On the other side of a lengthy rebuild, the Orioles are 54-35 and

enjoyed the franchise’s best first half winning percentage since 1997. They sent four players to the All-Star Game and boast the thirdbest record in baseball, which they’ll put to the test by hosting the fourth-best team, the Miami Marlins, beginning Friday. With a young roster chock full of talent, the club’s future on the field is auspicious.

The off-the-field topic of the club’s lease with the state was downplayed by commission­er Manfred this week at the All-Star Game.

”I have every confidence that there will be a resolution on these issues,” Manfred said. “They’ll stay in Baltimore.”

Scott, Baltimore’s Democratic mayor, does not have a direct role in negotiatio­ns between the club and state, but he is in “frequent contact with both state leaders and with Chairman Angelos on a host of issues,” spokespers­on Bryan

Doherty said in a statement Wednesday.

”He’s confident that the O’s aren’t going anywhere anytime soon,” Doherty said.

The Orioles have played in Baltimore since 1954 and at Camden Yards since 1992 and Angelos has long been adamant that would be the case for decades to come. Baltimore has a rich MLB tradition, one of baseball’s most iconic ballparks and, what’s more, the state has promised $600 million in public funds to improve the ballpark — a deal that has been denounced by economists for benefiting the privately owned club instead of taxpayers.

Lease negotiatio­ns have been protracted, though. In Thursday’s statement, Moore and Angelos pointed to the importance of transformi­ng the area around the stadium; in February, Moore and Angelos traveled to Atlanta together to study the Braves’ ballpark district, which Angelos has cited as a model.

”What comes next for the Camden Yards campus must serve our entire community and the city as a whole,” the statement from Moore and Angelos said. “From the ballpark and surroundin­g neighborho­ods to Harborplac­e and the Inner Harbor, we are committed to making the downtown corridor a premier destinatio­n that benefits Baltimore and Maryland residents yearround.”

The Orioles had the opportunit­y in February to exercise a one-time option in the lease to extend it by five years but declined, believing a set deadline would allow both sides to come together on a new agreement. Angelos’ hopes of a deal in mid-July were not as firm as the contract’s eventual completion, but the end of the All-Star break represents another self-imposed timeframe that has come and gone.

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January, Angelos volunteere­d to reporters that he would reveal “the financials of the Orioles” and again said in February he would meet with reporters to discuss the topic “before spring training is over.”

“When I say something, like I’m gonna sit down with you guys, explain the business from my perspectiv­e, I’m gonna do it,” Angelos told reporters. “I’m not gonna say it and walk away from it.”

That meeting never took place.

The lease is a much more integral matter, however, as it is what formally binds the club to the city. Whether a lease gets signed this month or in December is not terribly important, but the Orioles are incentiviz­ed to agree to a new lease sooner rather than later because it would give the team access to $600 million in public funds to upgrade Camden Yards. Accessing that money is contingent upon a long-term lease.

Martin J. Greenberg, a Milwaukee-based attorney who specialize­s in sports law and wrote the 2000 book, “The Stadium

Game,” said that the Orioles are “blessed with one of the best deals in baseball.”

“If I was the owner, I would jump for joy with this deal,” Greenberg said.

The neighborin­g Ravens similarly had access to state funds and they extended their lease with the stadium authority by 10 years (with two five-year options) in January. M&T Bank Stadium, the NFL team’s home, expects to receive some upgrades by the start of 2024 and up to $450 million in improvemen­ts by 2026.

Angelos said in February that, with the funds, there would be basic improvemen­ts to Oriole Park — like modernizin­g the air-conditioni­ng system, for example — as well as renovated seating areas, a scoreboard replacemen­t and developmen­t surroundin­g the ballpark. Specifics on those renovation­s remain to be seen.

The public money can’t be accessed, however, until a lease is signed.

Fewer than six months remain on the Orioles’ current agreement, although the team and stadium authority could sign another short extension. But the All-Star break and Angelos’ hopes of a gift along with it are nearly over.

Both baseball season and the calendar year have passed their respective midpoints. The Orioles remain without a longterm lease to keep them at Camden Yards.

In February, Orioles CEO and Chairman John Angelos said he would “love to have [a new lease] as an All-Star break gift for everybody, really, in the community.” The All-Star break ends Friday, when the Orioles begin the second half of their season against the Miami Marlins, but no new deal has been struck between the team and the Maryland Stadium Authority, which serves as its landlord at Oriole Park.

In a joint statement Thursday from Democrat Gov. Wes Moore and Angelos, the two sides did not provide particular­s on lease negotiatio­ns, but said progress is being made on their “vision to expand and revitalize the Camden Yards campus.”

“We are determined to make it happen, and soon,” said the statement, which was originally credited to Moore and the Orioles before the team issued an amendment about two hours later.

Earlier in the week, MLB commission­er Rob Manfred said his “view of the future of the Orioles in Baltimore has not changed.”

“I have every confidence that there will be a resolution on these issues,” Manfred said before the All-Star Game in Seattle. “They’ll stay in Baltimore.”

On the other side of a lengthy rebuild, the Orioles (54-35) enjoyed the franchise’s best first-half winning percentage since 1997. They sent four players to the All-Star Game and have the third-best record in baseball.

Scott does not have a direct role in negotiatio­ns between the club and the state, but he is in “frequent contact with both state leaders and with Chairman Angelos on a host of issues,” spokespers­on Bryan Doherty said in a statement Wednesday.

“He’s confident that the O’s aren’t going anywhere anytime soon,” Doherty said.

The Orioles have played in Baltimore since 1954 and at Camden Yards since 1992, and Angelos has long been adamant that would be the case for decades to come. The current lease, originally a 30-year agreement made in 1992 that was extended two more years in 2021, has fewer than six months until it expires at the end of the calendar year.

“What comes next for the Camden Yards campus must serve our entire community and the city as a whole,” the statement from Moore and the Orioles said. “From the ballpark and surroundin­g neighborho­ods to Harborplac­e and the Inner Harbor, we are committed to making the downtown corridor a premier destinatio­n that benefits Baltimore and Maryland residents yearround.”

The team had the opportunit­y in February to exercise a one-time option in the lease to extend it by five years but declined, believing a set deadline would allow both sides to come together on a new agreement. Angelos’ hopes of a deal in mid-July were not as firm as the contract’s completion, but the end of the All-Star break represents another self-imposed timeframe that has come and gone.

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January, Angelos volunteere­d to reporters that he would reveal “the financials of the Orioles” and again said in February he would meet with reporters “before spring training is over.”

“When I say something, like I’m gonna sit down with you guys explain the business from my perspectiv­e, I’m gonna do it,” Angelos said. “I’m not gonna say it and walk away from it.”

The meeting never took place. The lease is a much more integral matter, however, as it is what officially binds the club to the city.

In 2019, Angelos notably declared that the Orioles will play in Baltimore “as long as Fort McHenry is standing watch over the Inner Harbor” and has reiterated that point several time in the years since. Angelos is incentiviz­ed to agree to a new lease to keep the team in Baltimore not only because it would validate his past comments, but also because it would give the team access to $600 million in public money to upgrade Camden Yards. The neighborin­g Ravens extended their lease with the MSA in January, gaining access to the funds.

Only a few months are left on the Orioles’ current agreement, though the team and the MSA could also agree on another short extension. But the All-Star break and Angelos’ hopes of a gift along with it are nearly over.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY ?? Fans celebrate after an Orioles’ victory over the Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
ROB CARR/GETTY Fans celebrate after an Orioles’ victory over the Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States