The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Sale of team to Cohen approved

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NEW YORK — The Wilpon family’s control of the New York Mets neared its end after 34 years when Major League Baseball owners voted Friday to approve the sale of the team to billionair­e hedge fund manager Steve Cohen.

The transfer from the Wilpon and Katz families values the franchise at between $ 2.4 billion and $ 2.45 billion, a record for a baseball team that tops the $ 2 billion sale of the Los Angeles Dodgers from Frank McCourt to Guggenheim Baseball Management in 2012. The Mets sale is likely to close within 10 days.

Cohen pledged to inject about $9.5 million in additional payments this offseason for pandemic-hit employees.

“I am humbled that MLB’s owners have approved me to be the next owner of the New York Mets,” Cohen said in a statement. “Owning a team is a great privilege and an awesome responsibi­lity.”

An entity controlled by Cohen will own 95% of the franchise, and the Wilpon and Katz families will retain 5% of the team.

Former Mets general manager Sandy Alderson will return as team president.

“My family and I are lifelong Mets fans, so we’re really excited about this,” Cohen said. “With free agency starting Sunday night, we will be working towards a quick close.”

Cohen said all Mets, employees, including unionized groundskee­pers, security guards and engineers, will receive restored pre-pandemic salaries as of Sunday that reverse 5-30% salary cuts begun in March. He valued the restoratio­n at over $ 7 million.

A seasonal relief fund

will start Sunday and run through Opening Day for about 1,000 Citi Field employees of subcontrac­tors that makes each eligible for $500 monthly, a commitment of about $ 2.5 million.

Cohen pledged to “dramatical­ly increase” giving by the Mets Foundation and to prioritize not-for-profits and causes in the Citi Field area. He agreed to donate $ 17.5 million to programs developed by New York City to make grants to area small businesses through the New York City Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

Cohen made his announceme­nt as New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city does not object to the sale. The city had the right to review the proposed transfer of the lease of Citi Field, the Mets’ home since 2009.

The current Mets ownership group is headed by Fred Wilpon, brother-in

law Saul Katz and Wilpon’s son Jeff, the team’s chief operating officer. Fred Wilpon turns 84 on Nov. 22 and Katz is 81.

“We appreciate Fred’s decades of service to league committees and the governance of the game,” baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement. “Steve will bring his lifelong passion for the Mets to the stewardshi­p of his hometown team, and he will be joined by highly respected baseball leadership as well. I believe that Steve will work hard to deliver a team in which Mets fans can take pride.”

The 64-year-old Cohen is CEO and president of Point72 Asset Management. He first bought an 8% limited partnershi­p stake in the Mets in 2012 for $40 million.

“I know that Steve Cohen and his family share the same passion we’ve had for the Mets and for this city,” Fred Wilpon said in a statement. “Steve will continue, and will build upon, this organizati­on’s longstandi­ng commitment to the support of our community, and of those in need, which is especially important at this time. He shares the view that Saul, Jeff and I have long held, that ownership of the Mets is a public trust.”

The publisher Doubleday & Co. bought the Mets on Jan. 24, 1980, from the family of founding owner Joan Payson for $ 21.1 million, with the company owning 95% of the team and Wilpon controllin­g 5%.

When Doubleday & Co. was sold to Bertelsman­n AG, the publisher sold its shares of the team on Nov. 14, 1986, for $ 80.75 million to Wilpon and Nelson Doubleday, who became 50-50 owners.

Wilpon and his Sterling Equities partners completed his buyout of Doubleday on Aug. 23, 2002, ending what had become an acrimoniou­s partnershi­p. Under the original appraisal, Doubleday would have received $ 137.9 million — half the team’s $391 million value after accounting for debt. Wilpon sued, and the sides then settled.

The Mets failed to win any titles under the Wilpons’ time of sole control and their final dozen years were hampered by financial losses from the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme.

 ?? Amanda Gordon / Bloomberg ?? Steven Cohen, chairman and chief executive officer of SAC Captial Advisors LP, right, speaks with Paul Tudor Jones, chief executive officer of Tudor Investment Corp.
Amanda Gordon / Bloomberg Steven Cohen, chairman and chief executive officer of SAC Captial Advisors LP, right, speaks with Paul Tudor Jones, chief executive officer of Tudor Investment Corp.

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