Los Angeles Times

Rams owner buys large L.A. parcel

Team’s owner bought potential stadium site, insiders say, but there are many obstacles to bringing NFL back.

- By Sam Farmer

Stan Kroenke acquires 60 acres near Hollywood Park that could be a potential site for an NFL stadium.

The owner of the St. Louis Rams has bought a large piece of land in Inglewood that potentiall­y could be used for an NFL stadium, multiple individual­s with knowledge of the transactio­n have told The Times.

Within the last month, billionair­e Stan Kroenke bought a 60-acre parking lot located between the Forum and Hollywood Park, according to individual­s who spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on behalf of the buyer or seller.

Wal-Mart originally owned the land but sold it after failing to get public approval for a superstore. Madison Square Garden Co., which owns the Forum, had planned to buy the lot for an estimated $90 million in order to acquire more space for parking and possibly additional developmen­t. However, MSG was informed by Wal-Mart at the end of 2012 that the land had already been sold to an unnamed party. The individual­s confirmed the buyer is Kroenke, a former Wal-Mart board member and husband of Ann Walton Kroenke, daughter of Wal-Mart cofounder Bud Walton. For years, Kroenke has owned a substantia­l amount of land in Southern California.

The Rams neither confirmed nor denied that Kroenke had purchased the

land and declined to comment on the situation.

Los Angeles has been without an NFL franchise since the Rams and Raiders left after the 1994 season. Although relocating a franchise would be fraught with challenges, and the L.A. market repeatedly has been used as leverage to get stadium deals done in other cities, this is the first time an NFL owner has bought a piece of land in the L.A. area capable of accommodat­ing a stadium.

The Rams have been unable to work out a stadium deal in St. Louis, and, according to the terms of their lease, are able to move after the 2014 season. Last February, the Rams won an arbitratio­n case against the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission concerning upgrades to the Edward Jones Dome. The commission proposed spending $124 million to bring the venue up to date, but the Rams said the necessary renovation­s would cost about $700 million.

Kroenke’s purchase of the L.A.-area land puts additional pressure on St. Louis to come to the bargaining table or risk losing its NFL team. However, 60 acres is probably too small to fit a stadium and the required parking.

An adjacent 238-acre site is owned by Stockbridg­e Capital Partners, which intends to transform the recently closed Hollywood Park Racetrack into a modern residentia­l community, Hollywood Park Tomorrow, with developmen­t beginning this spring. It is unclear whether it would be possible or financiall­y feasible for Kroenke to purchase some portion of that land for a stadium, especially one unlikely to be publicly financed in any way.

Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts said that he was aware of the land sale and that he would welcome a football stadium if the developmen­t included shops, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent-related businesses that would be open yearround.

“It would not surprise me at all that there would be interest in a football stadium,” Butts said. “We have been the home of sports teams before, and we have experience working with sports franchises.”

Inglewood is centrally sit- uated near multiple freeways and Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, he said. “If there is to be interest by the NFL, we have the most desirable location.”

It is risky for an NFL owner to take an obvious step toward Los Angeles for a number of reasons.

First, Kroenke could be creating a lame-duck situation for the Rams in St. Louis, potentiall­y driving down attendance dramatical­ly, as was the case when teams that announced they would move lingered in the Houston and Cleveland markets.

In order to move, the Rams would need more than an escape clause in their lease. They would need to satisfy the NFL’s relocation guidelines, which require a good-faith negotiatio­n with St. Louis and/or the state of Missouri on a stadium plan. Because St. Louis has already shown a willingnes­s to spend public money on a venue — something that will not happen in the L.A. market — that would make it more difficult for the Rams to get the NFL’s blessing on a move.

The NFL effectivel­y controls the L.A. market, because the league participat­es heavily in the financing of new stadiums and the awarding of Super Bowls.

In the post-9/11 era, there is a potential Federal Aviation Administra­tion issue with building a stadium at or near Hollywood Park, which sits in the flight path of LAX. Al Davis, then owner of the L.A. Raiders, got a Hollywood Park proposal approved in the 1990s, but the world was a different place then.

There probably would be a slew of other environmen­tal challenges to building a stadium there — among them traffic and parking issues — particular­ly next to a large Hollywood Park Tomorrow developmen­t.

Already, there are two competing NFL stadium proposals in the Los Angeles area, one next to Staples Center, and another in the City of Industry. Both almost certainly would exert as much political and public pressure as possible to derail a third option.

Finally, a relocation would require a three-quarters majority vote of the league’s 32 teams. The fact that the Rams already left this market would be a strike against them. What’s more, a team filling the L.A. market would be a detriment to getting stadium deals done in San Diego and Oakland because it would deprive those teams of leverage in their home cities. A coalition of at least nine NFL owners could block any such move.

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 ?? Tom Gannam Associated Press ?? STAN KROENKE and St. Louis have disagreed on upgrades to stadium.
Tom Gannam Associated Press STAN KROENKE and St. Louis have disagreed on upgrades to stadium.

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