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READ THE FINE PRINT: LETTER SHOWS RAWLINGS TURNED DOWN BID

          Rawlings Sports Goods has "spurned a sale offer that
     would have nearly doubled the company's stock value, citing
     incomplete finances," according to the AP's Jeffrey
     McMurray.  Bull Run Corp. President & CEO Robert Prather Jr.
     said that his company offered $10 a share for Rawlings.  But
     Prather wrote in a "highly critical" December 15 letter to
     Rawlings, "...(W)e believe that the process has been
     unnecessarily adversarial and, as a result, we fear that our
     proposed transaction may not have been adequately
     considered."  McMurray noted that Bull Run "already holds"
     an 11% stake in Rawlings, whose shares were at $5.87 1/2 on
     Friday, up $.12 1/2 (AP, 12/17).  BRIDGE NEWS' Jennifer
     Allen wrote that Rawlings' three-year turnaround plan
     includes focusing on its MLB deals.  To "get its focus on
     baseball, Rawlings is likely to first jettison its hockey
     business ... Hockey has been [a] big mistake as Rawlings
     misjudged the efforts needed to become a dominant player." 
     Sales of the Vic and McMartin hockey brands "accounted for
     only" 5% of the company's net revenue of $165.4M in FY '99,
     while baseball "made up" 56%, basketball, football and
     volleyball 19% and apparel 13% (BRIDGE NEWS, 12/17).
          ANOTHER BULL RUN? The SPORTSBUSINESS JOURNAL's Daniel
     Kaplan reports that Bull Run last week "was set to pay"
     $158M to acquire Host Communications and Universal Sports
     America, or 23% more than "was disclosed" in February.  A
     rise in Bull Run's stock price "fueled the increase," as
     part of the original $128M purchase price was based on a $4
     Bull Run share price, but as of last week, the stock was at
     5 7/8 (SPORTSBUSINESS JOURNAL, 12/20 issue).

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