The Golden State Warriors ownership’s move from Oakland to San Franchise increased the franchise’s value
Is anyone willing to pay $11.33 billion to buy the Golden State Warriors franchise?
Sportico has once again done its annual assessment of what National Basketball Association franchises are worth. Of course a team is only worth as much as a potential owner is willing to shell out to buy a team. For what it is worth, the Golden State Warriors business is on top with a worth of $11.33 billion followed by the Los Angeles Lakers business which is worth $10 billion. James Dolan’s New York Knickerbockers business, which does not pay New York city property tax as Dolan’s team plays in the Dolan-owned Madison Square Garden on a piece of very valuable Manhattan property, his business is allegedly worth $9.85 billion followed by Steve Ballmer’s Los Angeles Clippers’ business, which just moved into a new venue, is worth $6.72 billion. In the fifth spot is the Boston Celtics business and NBA owners know exactly what the team is worth as it was recently sold for a reported $6.1 billion. Apparently Bill Chisholm got a break in buying the business as Sportico lists the business as being worth $6.35 billion dollars. NBA franchises in Brooklyn, Chicago and Miami are valued at more than six billion dollars. Businesses in Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas, Toronto, Phoenix, Atlanta and Sacramento come in at about five billion dollars or more.
The top valued teams are in the big markets. The NBA has two businesses with expiring leases in New Orleans and in Memphis. The Memphis Grizzlies ownership is in talks with Memphis political leaders about extending the business’s lease with the city to use the city-owned arena beyond 2029. There is a plan to spend around $550 million to renovate the Memphis arena that opened in 2005. The franchise is worth about $4 billion and is at the bottom of the league. Sportico thinks NBA teams are worth big dollars.
Lane Kiffin’s 31–24 win over Florida Saturday night kept Ole Miss alive in the SEC title race and the College Football Playoff hunt. But the real story? Where will Kiffin coach next season—Oxford or Gainesville? LSU is not in the mix. According to reports from a number of media outlets including USA Today, ESPN, and CBS Sports, Kiffin’s focus is squarely on Ole Miss and Florida.
Lane Kiffin reportedly views this next move as his final stop. Whether he stays at Ole Miss or takes the Florida job, he wants full control, long-term security, and a shot at a national championship. He’s inspired by Urban Meyer and Steve Spurrier, both of whom won titles at Florida with full autonomy.
Florida’s Pitch vs. Ole Miss’ Loyalty
Florida offers:
Elite facilities
Fertile recruiting ground
A massive salary package (reportedly $10M+)
Ole Miss counters with:
A top-10 salary ($9M)
Strong administrative support
A loyal fan base and winning culture
Sources from the Gainesville Sun, Florida Times-Union, and Clarion Ledger confirm both schools are actively pursuing Kiffin.
Lane Kiffin Represented By Jimmy Sexton: Leverage and SEC Loyalty
Kiffin’s agent, Jimmy Sexton, is reportedly in touch with both programs. Ole Miss has already placed a new offer on Kiffin’s desk. Either way, Sexton will ensure Lane Kiffin gets everything he wants.
Kiffin wants to stay in the SEC and compete for national titles. Florida may be hard to turn down, but Ole Miss has been good to him. The decision will shape the SEC for years to come.
Does Major League Soccer Have a Vancouver Problem?
Does the MLS have a Vancouver problem? Increasingly, the answer appears to be yes.
The Vancouver Whitecaps ownership group’s lease with PayCo, a British Columbia provincial Crown corporation, expires at the end of December, and Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber is publicly pressuring PayCo to improve the terms. According to Garber, the Whitecaps’ owners are not getting anywhere near the stadium revenue needed to operate competitively or sustainably in today’s MLS landscape.
Garber did not mince words. “The club isn’t sustainable in a situation where they’re in a building which they have no control over, they have minimal participation with revenue. The biggest issue is the lack of schedule flexibility,” he said. The Whitecaps are missing out on essential revenue from concessions, and the team regularly loses access to needed dates because of other events. In 2024, an MLS playoff game that was slated to be played in Vancouver had to be moved entirely because the venue was already booked—forcing the Vancouver-Portland matchup to be relocated to Portland.
Ownership Pressures and Stadium Challenges
PayCo responded by insisting they want to keep Whitecaps games in the stadium, issuing a statement describing “productive discussions” with club ownership. But the story behind the scenes is more complicated. The Whitecaps ownership quietly put the franchise up for sale nearly a year ago, signaling deeper concerns about long-term stability. At the same time, the ownership group began speaking with Vancouver city officials about the possibility of constructing a soccer-specific stadium—something MLS has favored for decades.
BC Place, Vancouver’s existing stadium, seats 55,000 people and is 42 years old. It is currently undergoing yet another renovation, in part because the venue will host seven FIFA Men’s World Cup games in 2026. Since FIFA does not choose outdated or poorly maintained venues for its marquee events, the upgrades are substantial. A new “premium hospitality” area is expected to generate a fresh revenue stream, raising questions about whether improved financial terms might now be possible for the Whitecaps.
Garber’s Mission: Better Venues and Better Deals
A commissioner’s job is to advocate for stronger venues and better lease agreements for every franchise, and Garber has made that clear in Vancouver’s case. With MLS growing rapidly and club valuations climbing, teams need full access to stadium revenues to keep pace. Whether that happens at BC Place—or in a new stadium altogether—may determine the future of the Whitecaps in Vancouver.
ESPN Makes News with NFL deal along with new streaming app coning soon
The Tenure of Paul Tagliabue Defined by Stability, Strategy, and Big Money
Paul Tagliabue did what needed to be done to be a successful sports league commissioner. Tagliabue, who recently passed away at the age of 84, stepped into one of the most challenging roles in American sports when he replaced the legendary Pete Rozelle. Following Rozelle was no easy act, but Tagliabue understood the essential truth of the job: make the owners money, protect the league’s interests, and keep the machine running smoothly. By that metric—and many others—Tagliabue excelled.
One of the biggest turning points of his tenure came in 1993, when Rupert Murdoch’s FOX network was struggling to stay alive and searching desperately for a programming identity. Murdoch needed a major sports property to legitimize his young network, and he shocked the industry by outbidding CBS for the National Football Conference television package. Murdoch made a massive gamble. Tagliabue took the money, and the NFL walked away with a financial windfall. FOX, in turn, took over a series of CBS affiliates and reshaped American television, giving those stations shows like The Simpsons and Married With Children while CBS lost 60 Minutes in several major markets.
Labor Peace and Legal Battles Shaped the League’s Growth
Tagliabue’s relationship with the National Football League Players Association Executive Director Gene Upshaw also became a defining factor of his era. While the two never publicly detailed the mechanics of their working relationship, it was clear they had an understanding that benefitted both sides. The NFL enjoyed unprecedented labor peace, despite a series of complex legal rulings—most notably a court-ordered form of free agency—that changed the business structure of the league. Instead of chaos, the NFL kept moving forward, stabilizing its economic structure and keeping players and owners aligned enough to avoid major disruptions.
Expansion, Relocation, and an Evolving NFL Landscape
The 1990s also became an era of franchise movement and expansion under Tagliabue. In 1995, Al Davis took the Los Angeles Raiders franchise back to Oakland. That same year, Georgia Frontiere moved her Los Angeles Rams to St. Louis. Not long after, Art Modell uprooted the Cleveland Browns franchise for Baltimore in 1996. In 1997, Bud Adams relocated the Houston Oilers to Tennessee.
The moves triggered political battles as well. The city of Cleveland sued the NFL, ultimately forcing the league to promise a return to the city—leading to a 1999 expansion team. Earlier in the decade, the league added franchises in Charlotte and Jacksonville, continuing its push into new markets.
By 1999, the NFL sought a 32nd team and hoped desperately to reenter Los Angeles. With no stadium deal available, the league instead awarded the franchise to Houston.
A Commissioner Who Delivered
Tagliabue retired in 2006, leaving behind a league richer, more stable, and more nationally dominant than when he arrived. Above all else, he made the NFL owners money—and in their eyes, that made him a success.