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Closing Bell

Overwatch League Expanding With Teams In Atlanta, Guangzhou

Atlanta and Guangzhou, China, will join the Overwatch League in '19, league officials and the new team owners announced today. Cox Enterprises and Las Vegas-based advisory firm Province Inc. will own the Atlanta team through a new joint venture, Atlanta Esports Ventures. It will be the second U.S. communications conglomerate to own a team after Comcast’s Philadelphia Fusion team. Guangzhou will be owned by the Nenking Group, a financial and entertainment conglomerate controlled by billionaire Zhong Naixoing that also owns the Guangzhou Long Lions of the Chinese Basketball Association. ESPN first reported these sales as negotiations reached completion in recent days.

Prices were not disclosed, but sources said the OWL was seeking at least $30M for the expansion franchises, though that number could have doubled depending on competitive bids or the desirability of certain cities. The 12 charter spots in the league sold in ‘17 each sold for $20M.

OWL hopes to finalize four more expansion deals this year, but Atlanta might be the only American city added. The second-year plan calls for two slots in North America, but one could come from outside the U.S., according to Activision Blizzard Esports Leagues President& CEO Pete Vlastelica. Currently, nine of 12 teams call U.S. cities home and 11 of the 12 teams are American-owned. “When all is said and done this year, we’ll have a more balanced league around the globe than we have today,” Vlastelica said.

Atlanta’s CEO will be Paul Hamilton, a principal at Province who developed a relationship with Cox through his role as President & CEO of The Greenspun Corp., a family office of the Las Vegas Sun publishing and real estate dynasty. Hamilton said he is eager to partner with Cox and Activision Blizzard, in an industry that has already proven its worth at home. “From a very basic level, the fact that my twin 7-year-olds and 10-year-old stop everything they’re doing when I get online and play, no matter what it is -- whenever I do business it has to speak to me on that basis,” Hamilton said. Atlanta was always a target city for OWL, Vlastelica said.

A second team in China is especially valuable to the league, as upwards of half of all OWL viewership comes from China. That despite the first season included just one team -- the historically uncompetitive Shanghai Dragons, who finished 0-40. “China is a priority market for the Overwatch League,” Vlastelica said. “With another Chinese team in the Overwatch League, we expect viewership to increase. Adding teams will grow the audience and give us more commercial opportunities there.”

Activision Blizzard Esports Leagues CRO Brandon Snow, who used to run the NBA’s Chinese business, is giving a keynote address on the OWL at the ChinaJoy digital entertainment expo in Shanghai. Team identities will be announced later. Expansion teams have an exclusive window to sign free agents from Sept. 9-Oct. 7.

For more coverage of the business of esports, visit our partners, esportsobserver.com.

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