logo
Tampa Bay Rays say they are in talks for a potential sale amid stadium uncertainty

Tampa Bay Rays say they are in talks for a potential sale amid stadium uncertainty

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — The Tampa Bay Rays say they are in 'exclusive discussions' with a Florida investment group for a potential sale of the team.
The Rays are valued at $1.25 billion, according to Forbes magazine. Stuart Sternberg bought the Major League Baseball club for $200 million in 2004.
'The Tampa Bay Rays announced that the team has recently commenced exclusive discussions with a group led by Patrick Zalupski, Bill Cosgrove, Ken Babby and prominent Tampa Bay investors concerning a possible sale of the team,' the club said Wednesday while declining further comment.
The potential sale comes at a precarious time for the Rays and their home ballpark. They are playing this season at the spring training home of the New York Yankees in Tampa after the roof of Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg was heavily damaged during Hurricane Milton last October.
Before the hurricane, the Rays and the city had agreed on a plan for a $1.3 billion stadium development project next to Tropicana Field. In March, Sternberg said the club was withdrawing from that agreement.
St. Petersburg is spending about $55 million to repair Tropicana Field with a plan for the Rays to return there in 2026. The city and the club have a three-year agreement to play there. Beyond that, the club's future in the Tampa Bay area is uncertain.
When the Rays withdrew from the project, the city noted that it was possible the club would have new owners.
'If in the coming months a new owner, who demonstrates a commitment to honoring their agreements and our community priorities emerges, we will consider a partnership to keep baseball in St. Pete,' Mayor Ken Welch said in March. 'But we will not put our city's progress on hold as we await a collaborative and community-focused baseball partner.'
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski 's selection to NL All-Stat roster
Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski 's selection to NL All-Stat roster

Washington Post

time21 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski 's selection to NL All-Stat roster

SAN FRANCISCO — The addition of Milwaukee Brewers rookie phenom pitcher Jacob Misiorowski to the National League All-Star team drew mixed reactions around Major League Baseball. Some players and fans quickly took to social media to express their frustrations over a player with only five starts in the majors being added to the NL roster instead of other players who have put up as good, if not better, numbers during the first half of the season. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who will manage the NL squad Tuesday in Atlanta, is on the opposite end of the spectrum. Roberts made it clear that he had no voice in selecting Misiorowski but sees the move as a positive, given the entertainment value of the Midsummer Classic. 'The All-Star game is about the fans,' Roberts said. 'Yes, this kid hasn't pitched a whole lot in the big leagues but I do think it sparks some more excitement, seeing the velocity.' The 23-year-old, who is 4-1 with a 2.81 ERA, quickly gained attention when he threw a 100.5 mph fastball for his first pitch in the big leagues. Brewers manager Pat Murphy said he understood the backlash from around the league but sees it as giving fans what they want. 'People want to see Miz pitch,' Murphy said. 'He's the new shiny toy in the league. It's not deserving, that has nothing to do with it. He's been given this opportunity. It's not his fault. 'This wasn't a fly by night decision. This is something they thought through. I think it would be really tough for the kid to say no to that.' Murphy likened Misiorowski to former Detroit Tigers pitcher Mark 'The Bird' Fidrych. Fidrych was an All-Star his first two seasons in the majors, a unique player who would often talk to his glove while on the mound. Fans embraced Fidrych and his eccentricities because he had the stuff on the mound to back it up. He pitched 24 complete games as a rookie in 1976, including back-to-back games when he logged 11 innings each time. 'From what I know of The Bird, it just seems that he was really authentic and really super talented,' Murphy said. 'There's some parallels there for sure.' ___ AP MLB:

Kyle Finnegan can't hold the line, handing the Nats another series loss
Kyle Finnegan can't hold the line, handing the Nats another series loss

Washington Post

time21 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Kyle Finnegan can't hold the line, handing the Nats another series loss

MILWAUKEE — During a month filled with tumult on the field and in the front office, more misery came calling for the Washington Nationals on Saturday. The latest round was courtesy of the Milwaukee Brewers, who got Caleb Durbin's RBI single in the ninth inning against Nationals closer Kyle Finnegan to hand Washington a 6-5 loss at American Family Field. With his Nationals holding a 5-3 lead, Finnegan was seeking his 19th save. The right-hander instead yielded a single to Jackson Chourio on his first pitch before issuing a four-pitch walk to Christian Yelich. Andrew Vaughn followed with a tying double before he scored on Durbin's one-out liner to right. Another disheartening defeat ensured the Nationals (38-57), who dropped their third in a row and their seventh in eight games, will drop their third consecutive series heading into the all-star break. And Saturday's collapse overshadowed a breakout performance from rookie third baseman Brady House, who belted the first two home runs of his career. 'It's tough right now, but we're going to bounce back,' said House, who went 3 for 4 with three RBI. 'I feel like we're playing good ball right now, and I know we're going to bounce back. We're going to show up tomorrow and do what we can to produce.' Finnegan threw just 10 pitches while blowing his sixth save. House's two-run blast off reliever Abner Uribe had given Washington a 4-3 lead in the eighth inning. The Nationals added an insurance run in the ninth when CJ Abrams lifted a sacrifice fly that let Riley Adams score from third. That rally erased an unraveling in the fourth, when the Brewers (55-40) scored three times for a 3-2 lead. Miscues by the Nationals in that inning included starting pitcher Shinnosuke Ogasawara hitting leadoff hitter Sal Frelick with a pitch and left fielder James Wood misplaying a flyball off the bat of Chourio. The resulting double brought Frelick home and sent William Contreras to third. Two batters later, Vaughn doubled to bring home two runs and put Milwaukee ahead. Ogasawara completed the inning without further damage before being lifted in favor of Brad Lord, who kept Milwaukee at bay for 2⅓ perfect innings. The Nationals couldn't muster much timely hitting. In the sixth, they loaded the bases on Josh Bell's walk and consecutive two-out singles by Luis García Jr. and House. But Daylen Lile ended the threat when he narrowly missed beating out a slow roller that reliever Nick Mears collected and threw to first. 'You've got to keep your head up, got to go back tomorrow and do it again,' interim manager Miguel Cairo said. 'We've got one more game tomorrow here. You can tell the energy, the good at-bats. We played the game hard, and that's what you can expect from them. Sometimes it goes like that.' Cairo is managing his second series since taking over for predecessor and confidant Dave Martinez. Martinez and general manager Mike Rizzo were dismissed last Sunday after the Boston Red Sox swept a three-game series at Nationals Park. That day also featured the big league debut of Ogasawara, who allowed seven hits and four runs in 2⅔ innings. The Nationals' starting rotation was so depleted that they had few options other than to hand the ball to an untested 27-year-old signed out of Japan in the offseason. Injuries to the pitching staff combined with budgetary constraints had led to Rizzo acquiring Ogasawara for two years and $3.5 million. He replaced Trevor Williams in the rotation because of an injury to the right-hander's elbow that will require season-ending surgery. The early returns were positive for Ogasawara on Saturday, when he faced the minimum over the first three innings. A highlight was inducing a 6-4-3 double play in the second after the Nationals had taken a 1-0 lead in the top half courtesy of Lile's homer. Lile's blast, the rookie's second in the majors, came on a 3-2 fastball from Brandon Woodruff in the right-hander's first start at home in nearly two years. Woodruff missed last season while recovering from shoulder surgery; he made his season debut last Sunday in a 3-1 win at the Miami Marlins. In the fourth, House belted a Woodruff sweeper to left for the first homer of his career, extending the Nationals' lead to 2-0. But the good feelings proved painfully fleeting after Finnegan could not preserve the win. '[Finnegan] attacked the strike zone,' Cairo said. 'The first hit, Chourio, was just a bounce, a lucky base hit. We didn't have no luck today.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store