The Mercury News

New team for old Oakland arena?

Group proposes franchise for city

- By Annie Sciacca asciacca@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

OAKLAND >> An Oakland-based developmen­t group wants to buy the city’s share of the Coliseum site with the aim of landing a profession­al women’s basketball team to play in the same arena where the Warriors won three championsh­ip titles over the past decade.

Ray Bobbitt, founder of the African American Sports and Entertainm­ent Group, said Monday the organizati­on is negotiatin­g with the Women’s National Basketball Associatio­n to bring an “African American women-led” team to Oakland.

Leading that effort is business owner Shonda Scott, one of Bobbitt’s partners and an Oakland native who played basketball at Holy Names High School.

As the group prepares its formal request with the WNBA, the idea has garnered some

support from community and city leaders.

“We know that the city of Oakland and the East Bay region is one of the greatest sports fan bases in the world and will be eager to support a WNBA team,” LaNiece Jones, executive director of the Oakland-Berkeley chapter of Black Women Organized for Political Action, wrote in a letter to the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Authority board.

“No profession­al sports league was more essential to the social justice movement in 2020 than the WNBA,” she added. “This team and its ownership group will be an inspiratio­n to the girls and young women in our community.”

The Coliseum Authority board at its meeting on Friday will discuss submitting a lease and license agreement as part of the group’s formal proposal to bring a WNBA team to Oakland.

Referencin­g a recent Sports Illustrate­d cover story about growing interest in the WNBA, Oakland Vice Mayor Rebecca Kaplan told this news organizati­on in a text: “Oakland, with a strong and dedicated fan base, and a ready-to-use great basketball arena that’s easy to get to, is a perfect place for a new WNBA team.”

A women’s basketball team would be a key element of an ambitious plan Bobbitt and his partners have been envisionin­g for the Coliseum site, where they also want to build housing, office space, retail, a life sciences campus and a stadium for an NFL team, Bobbitt said.

“East Oakland really needs the developmen­t,” Bobbitt said, citing a need to stem the crime and displaceme­nt that has plagued the area’s neighborho­od.

He and others in the group, including former Oakland city manager Robert Bobb, say their plan offers a chance to create a Black business district and inject jobs and economic developmen­t.

In submitting their $92.5 million bid to buy the city’s share of the Coliseum, Bobbitt and Bobb are partnering with a Black owned investment firm Loop Capital, Oakland developer Alan Dones and sports agent Bill Duffy, Bobbitt said.

Theirs is one of several groups that have expressed interest in buying the city’s share of the Coliseum. Alameda County agreed to sell its share in 2019 to the Oakland A’s for $85 million, so any group that buys the city’s half will have to work with the baseball team, which plays at the Coliseum but has been trying to build a waterfront ballpark at the Port of Oakland’s Howard Terminal while it develops housing, retail, office space and parks at the Coliseum.

The A’s have offered to buy the city’s share of the Coliseum for the same $85 million it paid the county. Other bids include one from former A’s pitcher Dave Stewart, who reportedly offered $115 million for the city’s share.

According to city staff, other potential buyers include Tripp Developmen­t and the Renaissanc­e Companies, which is owned by Floyd Kephart, who once had a negotiatin­g agreement to explore rebuilding the Coliseum arena and stadium.

The City Council on July 20 is scheduled to consider approving a term sheet with African American Sports and Entertainm­ent Group for the Coliseum site, but it’s unclear whether the other groups that had expressed past interest in buying the city’s portion will also be part of the discussion.

On that same day, the council is scheduled to consider a non-binding term sheet for the A’s Howard Terminal proposal. The A’s want a promise from the city to keep negotiatin­g over the waterfront ballpark project.

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