D'Backs Managing General Partner and Suns CEO Jerry
Colangelo said yesterday that MLB "is likely to go public"
in the next two to three years, followed by the NBA,
according to Jennifer Allen of BRIDGE NEWS. Colangelo,
speaking at a sports finance forum, said that MLB is
"centralizing operations, including acting to consolidate
Internet revenue." Colangelo: "This is all about bringing
back in-house what we own. We have the content and we have
the brand. It's time to take it back." Colangelo said that
MLB is "forming a new company, now called 'Newco,' in line
with its goal" of an IPO (BRIDGE NEWS, 3/28). The INDUSTRY
STANDARD's Bernhard Warner wrote that the new division will
"oversee the league's Net rights," with MLB Exec VP Robert
DuPuy as acting Chair & CEO. MLB has already "hired an
investment bank" to examine spinning off the Web unit.
Warner wrote that team owners have an "equal ownership
stake" in the venture but "not an equal take of the revenue;
that money goes to the league office." MLB Commissioner Bud
Selig can then "parcel" it out "at his discretion, favoring,
for instance, cash-poor clubs." MLB's Web site "won't be a
powerhouse portal right off," but the "list of potential
moneymaking ventures is long," including possibilities such
as memorabilia auctions and video highlight subscriptions.
But officials say that "many" new features "won't happen
until next season." In the meantime, MLB will work on
"integrating team Web sites" into the league site, and
"recruiting corporate sponsors." DuPuy says that MLB is
"considering an alliance with a media company or technology
outfit to build" the site into a "superfan site," which
could lead to an IPO (INDUSTRY STANDARD, 3/27).