New York Post

Cuban sells big stake in Mavs for $3.5B

- By RYAN GLASSPIEGE­L rglasspieg­el@nypost.com

Mark Cuban’s time as the majority owner of the Mavericks is coming to a shocking conclusion.

Cuban has agreed to sell a majority stake in the NBA franchise to Miriam Adelson, the wife of late casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, at a valuation of approximat­ely $3.5 billion, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

Cuban will retain a minority stake in the team and also still preside over basketball operations, the report said.

Cuban, who made his fortune selling the website broadcast.com to Yahoo in the late 1990s, bought the team for $285 million in 2000.

The Mavericks won the 2011 NBA championsh­ip and have generally been competitiv­e throughout Cuban’s tenure as owner, making the playoffs in all but six of the seasons that he owned the team.

The news is genuinely shocking, as the Mavericks were so inextricab­ly linked to Cuban’s public identity it is impossible to imagine the team being owned by someone else, even with the unique caveat that he is maintainin­g basketball control.

The timing of the sale is interestin­g, as Cuban also announced this week on the “All the Smoke” podcast that he will be leaving ABC’s “Shark Tank” after his 16th season on the program, on which he has invested millions in entreprene­urial ventures over the years.

Earlier Tuesday, Las Vegas Sands Corp. announced that Miriam Adelson was selling $2 billion in shares of the company — about 10 percent of her family’s stake — with the intent “to use the net proceeds from this offering … to fund the purchase of a majority interest in a profession­al sports franchise.”

Prior to marrying Sheldon Adelson in 1991, Miriam was a practicing physician, first in her native Israel and later in the United States.

The couple opened the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Research Clinic in Las Vegas in 2000.

Sheldon Adelson died in 2021 at the age of 87 from complicati­ons related to treatment for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Both Miriam and her late husband have been staunch donors for and supporters of conservati­ve and Israeli causes.

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