The Orioles have confirmed yesterday’s reports on a sale of the team, announcing Wednesday that a group of investors led by billionaire David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group private equity firm has purchased the control stake of the team from the Angelos family for $1.725 billion. Notably, former control person John Angelos will remain a “major investor” in the club and will serve as a senior advisor to Rubenstein in his new role. The transaction values the Orioles franchise and assets at $1.725 billion dollars, per the team’s press release on the ownership shakeup.
“I am grateful to the Angelos family for the opportunity to join the team I have been a fan of my entire life,” Rubenstein said in a statement within today’s press release. “I look forward to working with all the Orioles owners, players and staff to build upon the incredible success the team has achieved in recent seasons. Our collective goal will be to bring a World Series Trophy back to the City of Baltimore. To the fans I say: we do it for you and can’t do it without you. Thank you for your support. Importantly, the impact of the Orioles extends far beyond the baseball diamond. The opportunity for the team to catalyze development around Camden Yards and in downtown Baltimore will provide generations of fans with lifelong memories and create additional economic opportunities for our community.”
The sale of the majority share in the Orioles is still subject to review and approval from the remaining 29 owners in Major League Baseball. A formal vote is expected to take place next week at the quarterly MLB owners meetings. Among the more recognizable names in the Rubenstein-led group are Orioles icon Cal Ripken Jr., NBA Hall of Famer Grant Hill and Michael Bloomberg. Any concerns about a potential relocation following the sale should quelled; Rubenstein is a Baltimore native who’s already voiced his desire to keep the team in Baltimore long-term, and the recent 30-year lease extension at Camden Yards transfers to new ownership as well, per Danielle Allentuck of the Baltimore Banner.
“When I took on the role of Chair and CEO of the Orioles, we had the objective of restoring the franchise to elite status in major league sports, keeping the team in Baltimore for years to come, and revitalizing our partnership group,” Angelos said in his own statement. “This relationship with David Rubenstein and his partners validates that we have not only met but exceeded our goals.”
The Angelos family has owned the Orioles franchise since Peter purchased the team for $173MM. He served as the club’s control person into his 90s but eventually ceded that post to his sons, John and Louis. In the years that followed, a contentious battle for control of the organization emerged. Louis Angelos filed a lawsuit alleging that John took steps to seize sole control of the club against his father’s wishes and that his mother, Georgia, was making it a priority to sell and possibly even relocate the team. Georgia countersued, alleging that Louis had fabricated his claims in something of a powerplay of his own. The suits were dropped in 2023, nearly one year ago to the day, with the parties settling outside of court.
Between the infighting among the Angelos family and the long-running television rights fees drama with the Nationals, the Orioles have been embroiled in litigation for years. The Angelos family owned the majority stake in the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network, which broadcasts both Orioles and Nationals games, and the two franchises have been at odds for more than a decade over unpaid rights fees to the Nationals. An arbitration panel eventually ruled that the O’s owed the Nats $105MM in fees, which the Orioles appealed. An appellate court upheld the ruling last April. Now, Jeff Barker of the Baltimore Sun reports that Rubenstein’s group is also purchasing the control stake in MASN. Whether that will have significant ramifications regarding the arrangement between the Orioles and Nationals remain unclear.
As with any ownership change, the possibility for a major departure from baseball operations norms exists under new ownership. Since John Angelos was named control person in place of his ailing father, Peter, the Orioles have essentially sat out the free-agent market entirely. General manager Mike Elias has never signed a free agent to a guaranteed multi-year deal and hasn’t committed more than Craig Kimbrel’s $13MM to any individual player. That’s been in part due to the fact that the Orioles have been mired in a rebuilding process that spanned more than four years, but even on the heels of last year’s AL East title, they’ve been surprisingly quiet (much to the chagrin of Baltimore fans).
That rebuilding effort, of course, led the Orioles to develop one of the more enviable young cores in all of baseball. Catcher Adley Rutschman has already emerged as a superstar, and young infielder Gunnar Henderson isn’t far behind. Right-hander Grayson Rodriguez and top prospects like Jackson Holliday, Jordan Westburg, Joey Ortiz, Connor Norby, Heston Kjerstad, Colton Cowser, Samuel Basallo and many more create a favorable long-term outlook.
However, even as Orioles fans celebrated the emergence of their young core after so many noncompetitive years, Angelos put a damper on matters by casting doubt on the organization’s ability to sign anyone from that bunch to long-term deals. The now-outgoing Orioles control person told the New York Times in 2022 that in order to sign players like Rutschman and Henderson to the type of extensions they could rightly seek based on market precedent, the Orioles would need to “massively” raise prices for fans. Comments like that, paired with the general inertia that has embodied previous Orioles offseasons has led to frustration among the fan base.
Whether a change in ownership will bring about aggressive levels of spending remains to be seen. It’d be unwise to expect the Orioles to act with the same level of brazen aggression as, say, the Mets in the wake of the Wilpon family’s sale to current owner Steve Cohen. At the same time, the current levels of spending is practically the lowest of bars to be cleared. The Orioles ended the 2023 season with a $66MM payroll and project to open the 2024 season with just an $81MM payroll. Felix Bautista, the Orioles’ All-Star closer who is recovering from Tommy John surgery, is the only player who’s guaranteed even a single dollar in salary beyond the 2024 campaign. He’s promised all of $1MM for the 2025 campaign.
Time will tell the extent to which the Orioles’ recent market inactivity was colored by ongoing efforts to orchestrate this sale and whether Rubenstein’s group will be more willing to spend than the team has been under the watch of John Angelos. For the time being, the pending sale looms as a beacon of hope for an Orioles fan base that has become increasingly frustrated with the team’s ostensible unwillingness to supplement one of the brightest young cores of talent in the sport.
mbreslow77
So what if I haven’t stopped crying!!
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
I owe $116 on my utility bill,
wait…
I’m on the wrong site…
billion is a soup cube you put in hot water, right?
case
Now all you have to do is convince taxpayers paying off your utility bill is an excellent investment in their future! Just get behind a podium, play “We Will Rock You”, and repeatedly yell free market and vertical integration at the crowd.
JesusChryslerSuperCar
If we pay off Curly’s electric bill, he will surely reinvest that money into a job creation project, so those workers will pay taxes!
If he doesn’t, perhaps we could convince him to use a battery operated vibrator?
5TUNT1N
How come no ones screaming!!! They got that bag!!
Big whiffa
Great ! Now go ink snell and Montgomery !!
JCL10
I could definitely see Snell as a fit in Camden. Given that when he is struggling he is prone to the home run ball, that left field wall would be a big help and he would balance out a righty heavy rotation.
However, I’m pretty sure the Rangers will resign Monty. Hopefully.
LordD99
No way a sale and change of control will happen this offseason. I’m not even sure what they’ll vote on next week. Maybe a vote to move forward after extensive reviews and meetings with the two prospective owners. Things like this don’t happen in a week.
micg
Each club has to declare a principal decision maker. Both sides have already stated that Rubenstein will be that person. Once the other owners make that official next week he is the man. That is all that matters.
Rubenstein wants the team to fulfill his dream (just as Angelos once did) and is not going to commit for 1.725 BILLION dollars to let the Angelos family make bone headed moves. The Angelos family is just waiting for the old man to kick off so they can collect their money, and in the meantime, Rubinstein will be at the helm and the Angelos family are temporary shareholders with no more power than any other shareholder.
Heels On The Field
Yes, sign Snell and Montgomery or no deal. No trading prospects when they have no payroll. The Orioles don’t need Bellinger but they could afford to sign him as well.
BrianStrowman9
“Please screw your payroll or you can’t buy this ball club”
Aha
Fred Lingenfelser
Can’t tell if your post is sarcasm. If so, I approve. If not, well…
King Floch
Just Montgomery would be fine. The Orioles only really have 1 hypothetically open rotation spot presently.
tuck 2
You know it doesn’t work that way right.
Justinrlstn
Elias probably is ecstatic (just like the rest of us). Ready to take great core that he built and bring in some championships.
charlie 6
Angelos actually claimed extensions would require raising ticket prices? As if they are at their present levels due to his generosity toward the fans?
King Floch
Now you can begin to understand the reason for all of the elation this news elicited from us Orioles fans.
harrycarey
So if Rubenstein is 74 years old does one need to worry about the next potential owner?
just_thinkin
No because it won’t be Angelos.
And the other main guy involved in the sale is younger.
lesterdnightfly
“To the fan$ I $ay: we do it for you and can’t do it without you[r $$$$]. Thank you for your $upport.
Importantly, the impact of the Oriole$ extend$ far beyond the ba$eball diamond.
The opportunity for the team to [u$e taxpayer money to] cataly$e development around Camden Yard$ and in downtown Baltimore will provide generation$ of fan$ with lifelong memorie$ [of spending lot$ of money for non-ba$eball $tuff] and create additional economic opportunitie$ for [e$pecially me, my partner$,] and our community.”
Touchingly $elfle$$ !
Ubaldo Jimenez
What a foolish comment. Shame on you.
King Floch
And?
Raconteur
He’s already a financial elite. Yes, like any billionaire, he got that way through highly-dubious methods.
It is what it is.
But he’s from Maryland and he loves this team. So does Cal, obviously. The other guys, whatever.
I just want to see a World Series. I was like 3 last time so I wasn’t that into it.
BrianStrowman9
This is a popular concept in American culture now but it is not that crazy to be a billionaire and not do it through “dubious” methods.
I could invent a computer chip that revolutionizes computing and make a billion dollars.
Rubenstein isn’t the poster boy for that or anything but I just see that far too often.
Raconteur
You see it often because it’s almost invariably true. And a computer chip isn’t a great example considering that Steve Jobs and Bill Gates were two of the most exploitative innovators of the 20th century and made the bulk of their fortunes on the back of virtual slave labor.
Both of them were also massive philanthropists. Much like Rubenstein. It’s obviously not a black and white situation.
But yes, I’m sure there are exceptions and anyway it’s really neither here nor there. I’m ecstatic about the sale. I’ve been buzzing about it for two days now. I’m wearing my Rutschman jersey to work tomorrow. In Pittsburgh.
Have a good night.
micg
You first stated, “Yes, like any billionaire, he got that way through highly-dubious methods.”
You then said, “I’m sure there are exceptions and anyway it’s really neither here nor there.
So, which is it?
tuck 2
There’s zero truth to that. His reputation is pristine. Why waste your energy and our time making stuff up
sacrifice
A Social butterfly Billionaire?
This should be fun
King Floch
You love to see it.
*single tear*
dankyank
Congratulations, Orioles fans. So long as they hold the prospects and spend in free agency they’ll have the best of all worlds. This team is looking at a decade of contention.
stymeedone
5 more years before players start becoming FAs. A decade might be hopeful.
Fred Lingenfelser
The pipeline is deep. Should follow the Rays pattern of contending year after year. If I was the Orioles this year, I’d be trying to trade one or more of Santander, Hays, Urias, Mountcastle, as to not block as many of the guys who will have more years of control with high upside.
ctbronx7
Rubenstein’s group will control MSSN, helping assure that the Nationals will never control their TV destiny. Bank on that franchise’s next owner relocating to Nashville or elsewhere, where they will be able to maximize the club’s TV and streaming revenue.
stymeedone
The Orioles coughed up half their territory to prevent a congressional investigation into MLBs anti trust exemption. The Nationals will not be relocating.
Raconteur
Maybe they can go back to Montreal. It’s a beautiful city and they shouldn’t have left.
Trojan84
Orioles fans, consider yourself lucky. You have a new owner who will want to win, and you have one of the best young teams in Baseball and a great minor league system. We Angels fans are stuck with dear old Arte and his meddling. Arte destroyed our minor league system and made personnel decisions that make no sense. We suck! Congratulations from an envious Angels fan.
Armaments216
Something doesn’t add up. The article says Rubenstein is paying $1.725 billion for a control stake in an organization that’s valued at exactly that amount, but the former owner somehow remains a major investor?
Let’s Go O’s
Majority ownership doesn’t mean owning majority of the club. It means owning the largest stake
Armaments216
Exactly. That means Rubenstein would be paying less than $1.725 billion for a majority stake, if the total value of the team is $1.725 billion.
Os1995
He is buying 40% of the club initially. The club is valued at 1.725 billion. He is paying 40% of the 1.725 billion initially. He will pay the full 1.725 billion once he buys the rest of the club
LordTeaboBaggins
Basically, Rubenstein won’t be able to purchase the remaining 60% of the franchise until Peter Angelos dies. This is so the Angelos family can avoid having to pay capital gains tax, as the team will be an inheritance upon death.
SPOILER ALERT: Peter Angelos used Rubenstein’s money to place his brain in a robot body, making him effectively immortal
BrianStrowman9
@arnaments
It’s say the transaction values the team at $1.725B. He isn’t paying that much. If you and I buy a house together for $1MM—I didn’t pay $1MM but that’s the home value.
I take it he’s not buying out all the current minority owners either. Angelos doesn’t own 100% of the club—-he nor his family is going to get $1.725B.
micg
Yes, he is buying out the current minority owners as they are part of the Angelos group that initially purchased the club, and they agreed in that contract to relinquish their shares if the club is sold.
I would venture to guess that the 40% that Rubinstein now owns is their shares since the remaining 60% belongs to the Angelos family!
tuck 2
Angelos interest will transfer after Peter passes. No way these guys want them sticking around long term
tuck 2
“John Angelos will remain a “major investor” in the club and will serve as a senior advisor to Rubenstein in his new role. “…. Until it’s Tax efficient to be rid of him…
tuck 2
How do you get that ? It says very clearly they have sold a controlling stake in the club. Later it says MLB must approve the sale of a “majority share”. Remaining a major investor doesn’t mean control or majority. A 20% owner could be consider a major investor. The article is in pretty clear English.
stymeedone
Its all monopoly money. It doesn’t have to add up.
BaseballisLife
So John Angelos stays the control person with MLB until Peter Angelos dies.
BaseballisLife
Which totally sucks.
osfandan
No, Rubenstein at 40% will immediately be the majority holder and in control.
BaseballisLife
Not according to the official announcements. The Angelos are not selling a controlling interest now. The rest of the minority partners sold their interests in the team to the Rubinstein group which makes up the majority of what they are buying now if the other MLB owners approve the deal.
As articles have been talking about for years, they can’t sell more than a couple hundred million worth without paying hundreds of millions in capital gains tax.
Once Peter dies and Georgia, John, and Louis inherit the tesm, they will have a cost basis equal to the current value instead of the price Peter paid for his current interest in the team. Because of that they will not have to pay 25% of the sales price in capital gains tax. By a nasty or great loophole in the law, there will be no capital gains.
sophiethegreatdane
No, a big part of the deal that was negotiated is that along with the 40% investment, Rubenstein also takes control of the team.
micg
No, he does not! Did you not read this in the article? “John Angelos will remain a “major investor” in the club and will serve as a senior advisor to Rubenstein in his (Rubinstein’s) new role.”
MLB must approve ONE person as the controller and Rubinstein will be that person. Both sides have stated that.
Atloriolesfan
MLBTR can’t write a story about the Os without claiming Os fans are upset the Os aren’t shelling out big FA money. Os fans know that bad contracts with everyone from Palmiero to Albert Belle to Chris Davis to Alex Cobb are WHY they haven’t won a WS since 1983. Mike Elias is doing exactly what the GMs of the Os glory days did. Building a pipeline of young talent by exploiting GMs that buy old talent rather than building an organization.
2012orioles
No reason to not extend Adley and Gunnar. No reason they couldn’t afford Wandy Peralta at 4 mil a year vs claiming a guy off waivers and hoping he finds something. These owners are making bank. Im never one to say what you can do and not do with your money, but owners of sports teams should have some intent to spend to win. They don’t just not spend because they’re smart, they (meaning the Angelos family dynasty) are just cheap. Any GM would spend unlimited money because it’s not theirs. Of course you need to be smart with it, but to say they are being smart is just living in denial
LordTeaboBaggins
I can’t blame the Orioles for wanting to avoid shelling out cash in free agency, because as a fan, I’ve seen it essentially bite them in the ass nearly every time.
But I agree; we should at least be trying to extend the young core.
BrianStrowman9
Extension candidates right now are Bradish, Adley, Holliday, Gunnar, and G-Rod.
Obviously you could try to do a smaller extension with other prospects you believe in but that’s a tough crop. Holliday has his family’s money + the draft $. Gunnar is repped by Boras. Adley seems like the most attainable position player since he’s a catcher & that’ll ultimately suppress his earnings. I’d be surprised if we extended the 2 pitchers right now.
Hope we can hammer something out with a couple of guys though.
LordTeaboBaggins
@BrianStrowman
Ideally, I’d like to ensure Adley and Bradish, while waiting to see on G-Rod, Holliday, and Gunnar.
Raconteur
Adley is the most attainable, I think, because he’s not repped by Boras. He’s also a few years older due to college, so that may play some part in a decision.
Point taken about Holliday’s fam, but he’s also a Boras guy.
The good thing is that now we may at least be able to make competitive offers and/or match those of other teams. As opposed to making novelty gestures that no one would actually take seriously.
tuck 2
Just stop – please. Let the thing unfold
tuck 2
So to be clear – signing Wandy puts them in the WS?
2012orioles
No, but when you lose a playoff game because Bryan baker is in there instead of wandy, that is an issue. You have Stockholm syndrom form angelos. This is not how good teams operate.
tuck 2
Right so take a breath and realize that this sale has obviously been in the works and Elias couldn’t do anything big while it was happening and still can’t until it’s approved. So, we play with the hand we have for now and be happy that the future just got a lot brighter. There’s no need to do anything now just to say they did something.
Even if they step back some this year – which is likely, no team or organization is in better shape long term
Nosferatu Zodd
I wouldn’t sign Snell for league minimum. He obviously threw out his arm to get the big payday. He wants a quarter billion. That would kill the rebuild.
BrianStrowman9
I also don’t want to touch Blake Snell. If his market craters and he takes a pillow deal—sure. But it’d have to be 3 years or less with opt outs.
aragon
Senor Moreno, takea hint please!
Timjoebob
As a Nats fan, I want to know if/how this affects the TV deal that is shafting Nats ownership?
Nats ain't what they used to be
Yuck. Angelos does not go away after sale. Nats will never get a fair TV deal.