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Judge clears way for potential sale of Denver Broncos
Posted on 1/11/22 at 7:34 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 7:34 pm
Cliffs:
Pat Bowln died and didn't leave a successor and now, a third party wants to be able to match any sale price to buy the team. The firm claimed that it had a legal right of first refusal and that the stipulation was part of the 1984 sale contract when Bowlen bought the team.
This means, that no matter who or how much the team sells for, the third party firm would always be able to buy the team first, which would essentially scare off potential bidders.
But Today, a Colorado judge ruled that the 1984 right of first refusal is no longer enforceable, which means the team can now go on the open market with no hurdles (unless the plaintiff appeals the ruling or the kids begin fighting over who really gets the sale money).
It has been speculated that the Broncos will be a prime target for a Peyton Manning-led group to buy the team, which will likely be the biggest pro sports sale in N American history.
Pat Bowln died and didn't leave a successor and now, a third party wants to be able to match any sale price to buy the team. The firm claimed that it had a legal right of first refusal and that the stipulation was part of the 1984 sale contract when Bowlen bought the team.
This means, that no matter who or how much the team sells for, the third party firm would always be able to buy the team first, which would essentially scare off potential bidders.
But Today, a Colorado judge ruled that the 1984 right of first refusal is no longer enforceable, which means the team can now go on the open market with no hurdles (unless the plaintiff appeals the ruling or the kids begin fighting over who really gets the sale money).
It has been speculated that the Broncos will be a prime target for a Peyton Manning-led group to buy the team, which will likely be the biggest pro sports sale in N American history.
quote:
?
A multiyear legal dispute centering on the right to match an offer to buy the Denver Broncos was clarified on Tuesday when Judge Shelly Gilman of Denver’s Second District Court nullified a contractual right of first refusal (ROFR). The move could pave the way for the most expensive team sale in U.S. sports history.
A group representing the team’s owners—a trust representing the late Pat Bowlen and Bowlen Sports—have argued that the ROFR, found in a 1984 purchase and sale agreement of the Broncos, is not enforceable.
The plaintiffs insist that the ROFR lost effect when Bowlen and Edgar Kaiser Jr., the person from whom Bowlen bought the team in 1984, passed away. (Bowlen died in 2019 and Kaiser died in 2012.) The plaintiffs maintain the ROFR was an understanding between the two late men, rather than a contractual term that bound the franchise thereafter.
On the opposite of the litigation are the Kaiser Estate and a holding company. The defendants assert that the ROFR has continued in effect. As they explain the ROFR, its responsibilities and obligations were assigned to successors of Bowlen and Kaiser. They have also argued the ROFR was essential to the 1984 transaction since Kaiser allegedly wanted final say on who would own the Broncos in the event Bowlen attempted to sell. The two sides went to trial last fall.
Judge Gillman held that the ROFR is no longer enforceable. This means the Kaiser defendants will not receive a chance to match a sale, nor will they receive notice of a pending transaction (which would separately need approval by the NFL). The judge’s order can be appealed.
Sportico recently valued the Broncos at $3.8 billion. Team officials have interviewed potential bankers to assist in the sale of the franchise. A sale of the team would be a multistep process closely monitored by the league. The previous record for a team sale occurred in 2018-19, involving Joe Tsai taking control of the Nets and Barclays Center. The team was valued at $3.3 billion.
While the Broncos appear more likely to be sold, there remain complications on the ownership side. A major hurdle is that Bowlen passed away without naming a successor, and his seven children aren’t in agreement on how the Broncos should be controlled. Through a trust, each of the seven own about 11% of the team. This uncertainty would likely need to be resolved before any sale could take place.
In addition to an uncertain future for their ownership, the Broncos are also seeking a new head coach. On Sunday the team fired Vic Fangio after finishing 7-10, last place in the AFC West. In a statement to a media outlet Tuesday evening, Broncos president Joe Ellis said the team’s focus was on the coaching search and that an announcement on ownership would follow the completion of that hiring process
This post was edited on 1/11/22 at 7:36 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 7:50 pm to Jack Ruby
3.8 billion for the Broncos is a travesty. What in the hell are the Pats, Cowboys, and Giants worth?
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:03 pm to Jack Ruby
quote:
It has been speculated that the Broncos will be a prime target for a Peyton Manning-led group to buy the team
Why is this always speculated? Has he said he wants to lead an investment group? He's only worth about 250 million so he would need a majority investor, and really wouldn't be leading anything
Why no speculation about Elway?
This post was edited on 1/11/22 at 8:05 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:04 pm to blackandgolddude
quote:
What in the hell are the Pats, Cowboys, and Giants worth?
More.
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:04 pm to James11111
quote:
speculation about Elway?
Like Elway cleaning toilets?
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:08 pm to Chad504boy
quote:
Like Elway cleaning toilets?
No, as an investment group "leader"
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:16 pm to blackandgolddude
quote:
What in the hell are the Pats, Cowboys
hard to put on a number on it. it’s astronomical
quote:
Giants
no one cares
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:17 pm to James11111
quote:
o, as an investment group "leader"
Fun fact, Bowlen offered Elway 20% ownership in 1998.
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:42 pm to Wayne Campbell
quote:In 1998, Elway was offered 20% of the team for $36 million. He said no. 20% of the Broncos today would cost around $750 million.
Fun fact, Bowlen offered Elway 20% ownership in 1998.
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:54 pm to Jack Ruby
quote:
It has been speculated that the Broncos will be a prime target for a Peyton Manning-led group to buy the team, which will likely be the biggest pro sports sale in N American history.
Who would own the team though? The NFL is very keen on the majority owner model, especially for new non-family changes in ownership.
Posted on 1/11/22 at 8:54 pm to Athis
$35 mil probably would have been basically all of Elway's on-hand cash at the time. Can't say I blame him for not wanting to liquidate his entire bank account, but that move is why people like Jerry Jones become billionaires by gambling everything.
But honestly, how the hell are upper echelon nfl teams like Denver not worth $7-10 billion? I mean, shitty NBA teams get sold now all the time now for $2 billion+.
The Cowboys and Pats and Giants are all probably listed at about $4-5 billion by Forbes, but, in today's world, that seems quite low.
But honestly, how the hell are upper echelon nfl teams like Denver not worth $7-10 billion? I mean, shitty NBA teams get sold now all the time now for $2 billion+.
The Cowboys and Pats and Giants are all probably listed at about $4-5 billion by Forbes, but, in today's world, that seems quite low.
This post was edited on 1/11/22 at 8:55 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 9:03 pm to James11111
Elway needs to give up the GM job first, guy is terrible. Buy into ownership and sit in the background like most good owners.
Posted on 1/11/22 at 9:49 pm to UltimateHog
He’s not the GM any more. George Paton is. Paton made the call to fire Vic Fangio.
This post was edited on 1/11/22 at 9:50 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 11:05 pm to Jack Ruby
quote:
I mean, shitty NBA teams get sold now all the time now for $2 billion+.
No they don’t. Clippers and Nets are the only two that went for that amount. Clippers because of their market and the Nets because of their arena.
There may be 3, possibly 4 NBA teams that would sell for that amount now unless some idiots get into a nonsensical bidding war. And since someone will ask: Knicks, Lakers, Mavericks, and maybe the Bulls.
ETA, make that 4, maybe 5. I forgot about the Warriors.
This post was edited on 1/11/22 at 11:06 pm
Posted on 1/11/22 at 11:42 pm to blackandgolddude
Posted on 1/12/22 at 1:04 am to tk for tu juan
How are the Redskins the 5th most valuable team in the NFL?
Posted on 1/12/22 at 6:50 am to blackandgolddude
quote:
3.8 billion for the Broncos is a travesty.
Its probably a good deal IMO given the history of the team, location, and what teams are going for now. Team values will only rise barring some global catastrophe like another world war or something.
Posted on 1/12/22 at 6:53 am to Jack Ruby
Whatever ownership group gets the Broncos… Jay-Z will a part of it
Posted on 1/12/22 at 6:55 am to James11111
quote:
Why is this always speculated? Has he said he wants to lead an investment group? He's only worth about 250 million so he would need a majority investor, and really wouldn't be leading anything
In this case, yes. He has put together an investment group that is actively trying to purchase the Broncos
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