Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Dodgers owners buy into Lakers

- By Dan Woike

Philip Anschutz, owner of Staples Center, will sell his stake to Mark Walter and Todd Boehly.

The Lakers and Dodgers have long shared the marquee across the city’s sports landscape.

Now, they’ll share even more.

Two members of the Dodgers ownership group, chairman Mark Walter and co-owner Todd Boehly, are buying the largest minority ownership stake in the Lakers from AEG founder Phillip Anschutz, sources told The Times on Saturday.

The Lakers declined to comment with the sale still not completed.

The deal needs approval from the NBA’s Board of Governors, the league’s other owners, before it can be made official. That vote can be conducted remotely, a source said.

As part of the deal, Walter and Boehly will have the right of first refusal should Jeanie Buss and the Buss family decide to sell the Lakers. Sportico, whichfirst rethat

ported on the sale, said the Lakers were valued at $5 billion during the deal.

AEG chief executive Dan Beckerman told Sportico

the Lakers shares sale “is part of some financial planning and redeployme­nt of capital to other AEG projects and growth initiative­s.”

Beckerman didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong is also a minority owner of the Lakers, owning less than 5% of the team’s shares.

Anschutz increased his investment in the Lakers in 2001, two years after the team moved into his arena, Staples Center, in downtown Los Angeles. The Lakers last month agreed to extend their lease at Staples Center until 2041, assuring the team’s partnershi­p with AEG and Anschutz would continue despite the sale of his shares.

As part of the lease agreement, “nine figures” worth of improvemen­ts to the building have been pledged. Staples Center is scheduled to lose one lessee, the Clippers, when the team moves to its own privately financed building in Inglewood in 2024.

A source told The Times that Anschutz’s sale of his Lakers shares will not affect his ownership of the Kings or Galaxy.

Since the Walter-led Guggenheim Baseball Management group purchased the Dodgers in 2012, he and his partners have been rumored to be actively shopping for more sports property in the city. When AEG was up for sale in 2012, Walter and Boehly were considered strong contenders as buyers before Anschutz decided not to sell.

Since they bought the Dodgers from Frank McCourt for $2 billion, the team has made eight postseason appearance­s and three trips to the World Series, winning the championsh­ip last year for the first time since 1988.

Walter, known to be relatively hidden during the season, delivered a lengthy celebratio­n speech following the team’s World Series win over Tampa Bay in Texas.

In addition to his role with the Dodgers, he chairs Guggenheim Partners, a financial investment company with about $315 billion of “assets under management.” Forbes estimates Walter’s worth at $4.9 billion. Boehly, also an investment manager, owns a number of assets including the early publishing rights of the band The Killers.

Walter and Boehly are also among the owners of the Sparks.

The Dodgers and the Lakers aren’t strangers, having already been intertwine­d, whether through shared local TV distributi­on deals via Spectrum Sports or Magic Johnson’s involvemen­t with the two franchises.

In an interview with The Times in 2012, Boehly said the investment in sports had as much to do with broadcasti­ng rights as anything else.

“The only way to be relevant in this world, in my opinion, is to own live content that brings people together — not physically, but through networks,” Boehly said. “That type of interactiv­ity is programmin­g that is extremely valuable. It’s not like it’s the box talking to you. And it’s only going to get more interestin­g as the interactiv­ity develops.”

Walter and Boehly’s involvemen­t as buyers became public Saturday morning, with the news of the sale breaking late Friday night.

 ?? Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times ?? AEG FOUNDER
Philip Anschutz is selling his minority shares of the Lakers.
Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times AEG FOUNDER Philip Anschutz is selling his minority shares of the Lakers.

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