Ricketts, Tribune enter exclusive sale talks over Chicago Cubs
Tom Ricketts entered exclusive talks with Tribune Co. to buy the Chicago Cubs from the bankrupt media company.
The chairman of Chicago-based Incapital LLC was chosen from among three finalists, a person with knowledge of the process said yesterday on the condition of anonymity because he's not authorized to publicly discuss the transaction.
"My family and I are Cubs fans," investment banker Ricketts said in an e-mailed statement. "We share the goal of Cubs fans everywhere to win a World Series and build the consistent championship tradition that the fans deserve."
Ricketts's offer to Sam Zell's Tribune for the Cubs, Wrigley Field and a stake in a regional sports network was around $900 million, yesterday's Chicago Sun-Times said, citing an unidentified person familiar with the sale process. Ricketts must secure financing and win approval from Major League Baseball owners before completing the sale.
"We'd like to thank the Tribune company for overseeing a fair and competitive process," the Ricketts family said in its statement. "If we succeed in buying the team, our work will just be beginning."
Tribune spokesman Gary Weitman declined to comment. MLB spokesman Richard Levin yesterday said in a telephone interview that he'd heard nothing about the transaction.
Tribune's bankruptcy and a tightening credit market depressed the value of Cubs-related assets. The team, stadium and cable properties could have gone for $1 billion when the sale was announced almost two years ago, according to sports bankers.
Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, offered $1.3 billion in July, according to Comcast SportsNet Chicago, the cable network that's part of the sale. By December, bids had fallen as low as $850 million, a person familiar with the process said at the time.
The most paid for a major-league team was the $700 million John Henry put up for the Boston Red Sox, Fenway Park and most of the New England Sports Network in 2002.
Tribune selected Ricketts, whose father founded TD Ameritrade Holding Corp., over Marc Utay of private-equity firm Clarion Capital Partners LLC and real-estate executive Hersch Klaff. The publisher of the Los Angeles Times began the process of selling the team in April 2007 to pay down debt.
Almost $13 billion in debt and a deteriorating advertising market caused Tribune to seek protection from creditors on Dec. 8, less than a year after Zell took the company private. The team and Wrigley Field weren't included in the bankruptcy filing.
The Cubs are one of the most popular franchises in baseball, drawing more than 3 million spectators to their 95- year-old stadium in each of the past five seasons. Fans pile into Wrigley Field, on the north side of Chicago, to root for a squad that hasn't won a World Series in 100 years, the longest drought in baseball. The team hasn't even reached the championship round since 1945.
Chicago had the best record in the National League last season, only to get swept in the first round of the playoffs by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Ricketts, who met his wife at Wrigley Field, grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and attended the University of Chicago. The 43- year-old worked as a trader at the Chicago Board Options Exchange and attended classes at night to earn a graduate business degree in 1993.