$250 million in league
Carolina Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon is investing $250 million in the Alliance of American Football.
Dundon also will serve eight-team league that began play Feb. 9. His involvement came together in a matter of days last week, according to Dundon and Alliance co-founder Charlie Ebersol, though Dundon had been monitoring the AAF’s development and debut.
Ebersol said Tuesday that reports the Alliance was short on cash and needed a bailout from Dundon in order to make payroll were untrue. He said the league had a technical glitch in its payroll system that has been
“Tom’s funds were transferred to Alliance accounts last week, and players have never been in jeopardy of not receiving their earned paychecks,” Ebersol said. “It was a clerical error and has been resolved. The two are unrelated.”
Ebersol joined with Pro Football Hall of Fame than a year ago to create the Alliance.
- dinary undertaking for us,” Ebersol said. “It’s a giant challenge and opportunity, and as a startup you are constantly looking for some peace of mind. When we games, we saw there was so much interest from investors, and if we had one person who could take care of us for a very long time, that would be great.”
Dundon said the AAF won’t be seeking more investors at this time.
“We won’t bring in anybody for capital. We’re not going to take people’s money,” he said.
“It’s so early into this. We’re all in the entertainment business, so we’re just making sure to continue to do what they have done, which is put out a quality product people want to watch and consume, and hopefully we have the capital in place to take advantage of new opportunities. Things are a lot easier when you have got the capital and connections
Dundon also is the cofounder of Trinity Forest Golf Club in Dallas, home of the PGA Tour’s AT& T the majority owner of Employer Direct Healthcare, a health care services com - tor in Topgolf, a sports entertainment company.
The Alliance has teams - - It will play a 10-week schedule before its playoffs, - end of April.
Early response on TV — and digitally was positive, Ebersol said.
He also said adding Dun credibility.
“We think there will be other opportunities,” Ebersol said, “but the fact we took one of the biggest worries of any startup off the table with a partner who has proven he knows how to build businesses — and not build to sell but build to build — is huge.”