The Reporter (Vacaville)

A's running out of time to find home in Oakland, LV

- By Mark Anderson

The Oakland Athletics have spent years trying to get a new stadium while watching Bay Area neighbors the Giants, Warriors, 49ers and Raiders successful­ly move into stateof-the-art venues, and now time is running short on their efforts.

The A's lease at RingCentra­l Coliseum expires after the 2024 season, and though they might be forced to extend the terms, the club and Major League Baseball have deemed the stadium unsuitable for a profession­al franchise.

They are searching for a new stadium in Oakland or Las Vegas, but they have experience­d difficulti­es in both areas. The A's missed a major deadline in October to get a deal done in Oakland, and there has been little indication they will receive the kind of funding they want from Las Vegas.

“I think the A's have to look at it in a couple of ways,” said Brendan Bussmann, director of government affairs for Las Vegasbased Global Market Advisors. “Obviously, they have struggled in Oakland to get a deal across the line. It isn't for a lack of effort. … You have an owner that's willing to pony up money, you have a club that wants to sit there and figure out a way to make it work, and you keep running into obstacles along the way.

“It's time to fish or cut bait. Oakland, do you want them or not? And if not, where are the A's going to get the best deal? Is it Vegas? Is it somewhere else? They'll have to figure that out.”

What the A's are thinking is a little bit of a mystery. Team President Dave Kaval was talkative earlier in the process, saying the A's are pursuing two

different tracks with Oakland and Las Vegas. But he went silent on the subject several months ago. A's spokeswoma­n Catherine Aker said mostly recently that the club would withhold comment for now.

The A's have been negotiatin­g with Oakland to build a $1 billion stadium as part of a $12 billion redevelopm­ent deal.

Newly elected Mayor Sheng Thao said reaching a deal is important as long as it makes economic sense to the city. Her predecesso­r, Libby Schaaf, led prior efforts to reach an agreement, but after the city and the A's missed that October deadline, MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred expressed reservatio­ns a deal will ever get done.

“The pace in Oakland has not been rapid, number one,” Manfred said at the time. “We're in a stadium situation that's really not tenable. I mean, we need to do something to alter the situation. So I'm concerned about the lack of pace.”

Recent California history justifies his concerns. SoFi Stadium in Southern California and Chase Center in San Francisco were built with private money, and Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara was 90% privately financed.

“And then I think there

was some contagion where around the country people realized these deals could be done well privately and could generate a return on investment to those investors,” said David Carter, a sports business professor at the University of Southern California. “Why are we throwing public money at it at all?”

That's also a question being asked in Las Vegas, even though the Raiders in 2016 received $750 million from the Nevada Legislatur­e for a stadium. That then was the largest amount of public money for a sports venue, but it was surpassed last March by the $850 million pledged to construct a new stadium for the NFL's Buffalo

Bills.

Another deal like the one for Allegiant Stadium, where the Raiders play, appears unlikely in Nevada. T-Mobile Arena, which opened in 2017, was privately financed. An arena planned for south of the Las Vegas Strip also wouldn't rely on public funds.

Las Vegas, however, has shown financing creativity. Its Triple-A baseball stadium received $80 million in 2017 for naming rights from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. Room taxes fund the authority, so it was public money in a backdoor sort of way.

Clark County Commission­er Michael Naft, who

is on the board of the convention authority, has spoken with A's representa­tives about their interest in Las Vegas and said he is aware of the club's talks with other Nevada officials. He said the A's are taking a much different approach than the Raiders, who identified Las Vegas early as their choice landing spot after many years of failing to get a new stadium in Oakland.

“When the Raiders decided to come to Las Vegas, they had a clear plan,” Naft said. “You had a clear body that was tasked with assessing the worth and the value, and they committed to the destinatio­n. I have not seen that from the Oakland A's at any level, and it's not really

our job to go out and beg them to come here because we have earned the reputation of the greatest arena on Earth. We have put in both the dollars and the labor to make that the case.

“I think I've made myself clear, but from conversati­ons with others, I don't think I'm alone on that.”

New Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo hasn't stated his position on public financing, but no Nevada politician has publicly pushed to provide funding.

Manfred said in December, however, that the A's relocation fee would be waived if they move to Las Vegas, a savings to the club reportedly of up to $1 billion.

“We're past any reasonable timeline for the situation in Oakland to be resolved,” Manfred said then.

Naft said Allegiant Stadium filled a hole that went beyond landing an NFL team. It allowed Las Vegas to attract major sporting events such as the Super Bowl and Final Four and major concerts such as Garth Brooks and Elton John that “in many cases we would not otherwise have.”

He said he doesn't believe a baseball stadium would accomplish that, and sports economist Victor Matheson agreed.

“I think there's a real question about how much people are willing to watch baseball in Las Vegas,” said Matheson, a professor at College of the Holy Cross

in Worcester, Massachuse­tts. “It's not like locals don't have a huge number of entertainm­ent options right now, and it's not clear exactly how much people might travel to watch baseball in Vegas, either.”

If the A's truly want to be in Las Vegas, Naft said they need to make that clear.

“I just believe you can't play destinatio­ns against each other,” Naft said. “If you want to come here and you want to be met with open arms, you've got to commit.”

Should the A's fail to reach an agreement in Oakland or Las Vegas, they could consider other destinatio­ns such as Charlotte, North Carolina; Nashville; and Portland, Oregon. Whether they would have the time to explore such options is another question.

Oakland has already shown it will watch the Raiders move to Nevada and the Warriors go across the Bay Bridge to San Francisco.

Las Vegas, Matheson noted, is hardly in a desperate situation. He also expressed caution that Las Vegas could go from being among the largest metropolit­an areas without a major profession­al sports team to among the smallest with three franchises.

“So you've gone from kind of being under-sported to being over-sported in a short period of time if the A's were to go there,” Matheson said.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Fans at RingCentra­l Coliseum watch a game between the Oakland A's and the Astros in Oakland last July. The A's lease at RingCentra­l Coliseum expires after the 2024season, and though they might be forced to extend the terms, the club and Major League Baseball have deemed the stadium unsuitable for a profession­al franchise.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Fans at RingCentra­l Coliseum watch a game between the Oakland A's and the Astros in Oakland last July. The A's lease at RingCentra­l Coliseum expires after the 2024season, and though they might be forced to extend the terms, the club and Major League Baseball have deemed the stadium unsuitable for a profession­al franchise.

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