The Guardian (USA)

Lewis Hamilton takes ownership share in NFL’s Denver Broncos

- Bryan Armen Graham

The seven-time Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton has joined the ownership group of the National Football League’s Denver Broncos, the team announced on Tuesday.

Rob Walton announced the addition of Hamilton as a limited shareholde­r in a statement issued on behalf of the Walton-Penner family ownership group.

“[Hamilton] is a champion competitor who knows what it takes to lead a winning team and is a fierce advocate for global equality, including in his own sport,” Walton said in the statement.

“With over 100 race wins Lewis is considered the most successful F1 driver of all time. His resilient spirit and standard of excellence will be an asset to the ownership group and the Broncos organisati­on.”

The Walton-Penner group agreed to buy the team from the Patrick D Bowlen Trust last month for a reported £3.81bn ($4.65bn) in the most expensive deal for a sports franchise in the world, eclipsing the £2.5bn ($3.1bn) sale of Chelsea to an American-led consortium fronted by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly this year.

In April Hamilton and the tennis star Serena Williams joined a consortium led by the former British Airways chairman Martin Broughton to buy Chelsea that was among the final three bids to be shortliste­d. But it was ruled out after its dependence on a £500m ($611m) loan from three US banks was revealed.

The Broncos’ star quarterbac­k Russell Wilson celebrated Hamilton’s addition to the team’s ownership before practice yesterday. Wilson and his wife, Ciara, were guests of Hamilton’s Mercedes race team at the Monaco Grand Prix this year.

Hamilton, whose 103 grand prix wins are the most in F1 history, becomes the third known limited shareholde­r to join the ownership group of the three-time Super Bowl champions after Condoleezz­a Rice, who served as US secretary of state under George W Bush from 2005 to 2009, and the Ariel Investment­s co-chief executive and Starbucks chair Mellody Hobson.

The Broncos’ ownership group is fronted by Walton and includes his daughter, Carrie Walton Penner, and her husband, Greg Penner. Walton, 77, was chairman of Walmart, the world’s largest retailer, from 1992 until 2015, when he retired. He is the eldest son of founder Sam Walton and Helen Walton and has an estimated net worth of nearly £49bn ($60bn).

The NFL is expected to approve fully the purchase agreement to the Walton-Penner group at a league meeting next Tuesday in Minneapoli­s, the final step after it received approval from the league’s finance committee last week.

 ?? ?? Lewis Hamilton and Russell Wilson at the Canadian Grand Prix in 2018. Photograph: Mark Thompson/Getty Images
Lewis Hamilton and Russell Wilson at the Canadian Grand Prix in 2018. Photograph: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

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