The Day

BASEBALL OWNERS APPROVE SALE OF MARLINS TO DEREK JETER GROUP

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The Miami Marlins are Derek Jeter’s problem now.

Major league owners on Wednesday unanimousl­y approved the sale of the woebegone franchise by Jeffrey Loria to an investment group led by Jeter and Bruce Sherman. The deal needed 75 percent approval.

A signed $1.2 billion agreement was submitted to Major League Baseball last month to sell the Marlins to a group led by Sherman, a venture capitalist who will be the controllin­g owner. Jeter, the former New York Yankees captain, plans to be a limited partner in charge of the business and baseball operations.

The closing on the sale is expected within a few days.

“I congratula­te Mr. Sherman on receiving approval from the Major League Clubs as the new control person of the Marlins,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement, “and look forward to Mr. Jeter’s ownership and CEO role following his extraordin­ary career as a player.”

The Marlins have endured another disappoint­ing year and are assured of their eighth consecutiv­e losing season, the longest streak in the majors. They’ll sit out the playoffs for the 14th year in a row, the longest streak in the National League.

They’re also likely to finish last in the NL in attendance for the 12th time in the past 13 years, creating revenue constraint­s that may lead to a payroll purge in Jeter’s first offseason as an owner.

Among players who might be shopped is home run leader Giancarlo Stanton, whose salary will nearly double next year to $25 million in the fourth season of his record $325 million, 13-year contract.

The transition to new ownership has already begun, with four wellknown Marlins executives told they won’t be retained. They were special assistant to the president Jeff Conine, and three special assistants to the owner — Hall of Famers Andre Dawson and Tony Perez, and ex-manager Jack McKeon.

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