TGL's $70M Detroit Expansion Team Backed by Lions, Broncos Owners
TGL announced the expansion club Tuesday, saying Detroit will join the six original franchises for the 2027 season. According to a person familiar with the transaction, Motor City paid more than $70 million for a spot in the league, which could see further expansion after its debut season. That's more than double the entry fee for founding teams. A TGL spokesperson declined to comment on the team's expansion price. TGL parent company TMRW Sports was valued at nearly $500 million in a 2024 funding round.
Advertisement
More from Sportico.com
Owners tied to the Baltimore Ravens, Minnesota Vikings, Seattle Kraken, Toronto Maple Leafs and Colorado Rockies were all reportedly spotted at TGL matches in 2025 as big-name sports investors eye the upstart league. Washington Commanders co-owner David Blitzer, Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank and New York Mets owner Steve Cohen are among those already invested in teams.
'We really like those team owners that are operators of other sports teams and other professional leagues in their communities,' TMRW Sports founder Mike McCarley said last year.
In recent weeks, expansion speculation has followed news that TGL Holdings filed trademark requests for 'Chicago Links Golf Club' and 'Texas Golf Club' in addition to 'Motor City Golf Club.' A Dallas-based group has reportedly put up $77 million to land a team.
Advertisement
TGL has also considered adding women to its competition—and possibly opening a West Coast playing venue as well. L.A. Golf Club owner Alexis Ohanian said in April that he expects the team to achieve profitability in year two.
The Motor City ownership group also includes technology entrepreneur Kal Somani, co-owner of the Rajasthan Royals in the Indian Premier League; Ronin Capital Partners, led by Jay Farner, former CEO of Rocket Companies; and sports investment firm RHC Group. A PGA Tour event sponsored by Rocket Mortgage has been held at Detroit Golf Club in Michigan since 2019. Middle West Partners didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Michael Hamp's grandfather, William Clay Ford Sr.—himself the grandson of Henry Ford—purchased the Detroit Lions in 1964 for $6 million.
(This story has been updated in the penultimate paragraph with mention of Middle West Partners not immediately responding to comment.)
Advertisement
Best of Sportico.com
Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
17 minutes ago
- USA Today
Notre Dame football offers top-50 2027 Mississippi defensive end
There isn't much room left in Notre Dame football's 2026 recruiting class, with twenty-six commitments, they can start to look ahead to the 2027 cycle. They already have two commits, just one being a position player, but the Irish have sent out plenty of offers to some of the best prospects in the country. One of them was offered on Saturday evening in Mississippi edge rusher Derwin Fields. The 6-foot, 5-inch and 220-pounder is ranked by the 247Sports Composite as the nation's No. 45 overall prospect, just outside the 5-star range. Notre Dame now joins teams like Alabama, Florida, LSU, Florida State and others in offering Fields, who should end up being able to play virtually anywhere he'd like. It does look like its going to be tough to pull him away from SEC-country, but the Irish have put their hat in the ring. If Fields is able to make it up to South Bend during the season, it would be a great sign for Notre Dame to continue to be in the mix for his commitment. Time will tell if that happens, but for now, the Irish are clearly interested in him joining their 2027 class. Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on X (Formerly Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions. Follow Mike on X: @MikeFChen


Washington Post
18 minutes ago
- Washington Post
First comes retirement. Then comes the permanent vacation.
Chitlada and Vichit Apisukh never took a vacation. Not when the young Thai immigrants met and married in Hawaii nearly 55 years ago. Not when they moved to Florida to start a family and open a restaurant north of Orlando. Not when they traveled around half the country, the Bahamas and Japan to support their children's athletic ambitions.
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dave Hyde: Will Dolphins' big changes lead to results in regime's fourth year?
Culture is an easy word to talk about. It's not so easy to create, especially when you've flubbed it for three years as coach Mike McDaniel and general manager Chris Grier did in this Miami Dolphins era. So, they made some change in their fourth season that you typically see in an early-stage rebuild. That's the way to view this offseason's work that ends when training camp starts on Tuesday. You can praise them for making necessary change and hope they got it right this time. You can doubt them after three years of getting too much wrong. Hope and doubt are as inseparable as Grier and McDaniel at this point. They said good-bye to players who didn't buy into the collective culture like Jalen Ramsey, Jevon Holland and (gasp) Raheem Mostert. They quit writing unnecessary contracts for players just to be nice (though defensive tackle Zach Sieler needs paying). They turned the oldest roster in the league into something younger. All this offseason, Grier and McDaniel followed the first rule when you've dug yourself a hole: They stopped digging. That was important. But now comes the harder part of trying to lead everyone out of that hole. Can they? Will they? And, yes, lead is the operative verb for them here. Everyone around the Dolphins is hung up on which players are leaders, of how they lead, of their lost leaders like Terron Armstead and Calais Campbell. But if there's one thing this organization has lacked since Steve Ross took over it's leadership in the prime leadership positions. Ross wants to win and has spent a lot of money trying. But does he even recognize what leadership looks like inside an NFL team? His hires make you wonder. Joe Philbin was hired, Ross said, because he was organized as a power-point lecture showed in the interview. Mike Tannenbaum was hired, Ross said, because he ran the team's sports science wing so well. Adam Gase was hired due to his creative offensive thinking. Brian Flores was a gifted coach, but had people-management issues. Grier? He's followed whatever coach is in the building. Year 10, and does anyone know what he thinks winning football looks like? McDaniel is back to Ross's idea of a creative thinker and positive influence. Those are good qualities. But McDaniel's idea of a culture the first three years was of a football commune with his players, a kumbaya partnership with players who had done nothing to earn that relationship. Maybe McDaniel changes some in Year 4 after some of the players the organization trusted most like Ramsey and Tyreek Hill turned on the coach last season. The curiosity beginning Tuesday will be in seeing any such change. McDaniel's camp reflected his culture of comfort the past few years. Rotating days off for everyone. Few exhausting workouts. Players warming up without certain pads or helmets. No sprints after practice. One way to see it was progressive thinking in a league trying to reinvent training camp. Another way was the whispered word Armstead heard from players back when he signed with the team: 'Easy,' he said last year. McDaniel can't suddenly become Andy Reid, who takes his Kansas City Chiefs team away for training camp and has purposely tough practices. He can't be Florida Panthers coach Paul Maurice, who begins each training camp with the toughest five practices of the season to set a tone. Something more like what Washington coach Dan Quinn did in his first season last year would fit McDaniel's way. Quinn gave players a blank sheet of paper at the start of training camp and had them write their standards for their team's culture. He posted the results and held players to them. Maybe that helped explain how Washington had a fun playoff run last season. Maybe it was more rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels, too. The Dolphins have roster questions at cornerback and the offensive line. Most teams have some issue right now. But if Grier and McDaniel get the culture right this time that goes a long way toward solving problems of the past few years. That's the hope anyway. The intertwined doubt that's part of this training camp says if they can't solve it in three years they won't in the fourth year. That's the tension of this season. Hope and doubt. Now it's time to show how all these decisions work out. ____