• Loading stock data...
Sunday, February 23, 2025
opinion
Finance

The NFL Let the Private Equity ‘Barbarians’ Through the Gate

  • The NFL voted this week to let private equity firms buy into NFL franchises.
  • It’s a change of heart by the NFL, but fans won’t notice any real changes.
Aug 25, 2024; Landover, Maryland, USA; A detailed view of New England Patriots footballs on the field before the game against the Washington Commanders at Commanders Field.
Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports
Jun 7, 2023; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat forward Udonis Haslem (40) during the fourth quarter against the Denver Nuggets in game three of the 2023 NBA Finals at Kaseya Center.
Exclusive

Udonis Haslem Joins ESPN As Full-Time NBA Analyst

He won three NBA championships during his 20 years with the Heat.
Read Now
January 30, 2025 |

As NFL owners gathered in Minnesota this week and voted 31–1 to allow private equity firms to buy ownership stakes in teams, I kept thinking of the greatest business book of all time, Barbarians at the Gate. 

The 1989 title by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar chronicled the infamous 1988 leveraged buyout of RJR Nabisco by the PE firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. (The firm is currently being sued by the early founders and employees of FanDuel.) The Nabisco madness marked the start of the era of LBOs and “corporate raiders” like KKR and its PE peers.

Now the corporate raiders can buy into the NFL’s Raiders. Or any other team that will have them. (Probably not the Bengals, the lone dissent in the vote.) 

In Barbarians at the Gate, Teddy Forstmann of Forstmann Little, a firm that also entered the frenzied bidding war for Nabisco, derides KKR’s “phoney junk bond” money and declares, “We need to push the barbarians back from the city gates.”

The NFL has let the “barbarians” in. But despite it being a meaningful shift in position by the league, it really won’t mean much for the typical sports fan.

Private equity investors in NFL clubs won’t have any voting power, influence, or say in the team’s operations. They won’t be the faces of the teams and won’t have governance rights. Each team will be limited to selling no more than a 10% stake to private equity; for comparison, the NBA and MLB allow 30%. Additionally, no individual or group can own more than 7.5% of any league-approved fund (the NFL approved only eight), which means no individual from this new PE cadre will own more than 0.75% of a team. A team’s most devoted fans will probably never even catch a glimpse of the silent-partner suits who’ve bought in behind the curtain.

We know what’s in it for the teams: A low-pressure capital injection. “All it is,” commissioner Roger Goodell said after the vote, “is a silent position that would allow access to capital for those teams that wish to offer 10% of their team.”

What’s in it for private equity?  

For starters, it’s basically a guaranteed investment. No investment is ever guaranteed, but NFL team valuations have risen steadily every year, and the latest Forbes valuations are up an average of 11% from just a year ago. All 32 teams are profitable (not the case in the NBA or MLB). Owning a piece of an NFL team is the closest thing a group of rich people can get to a sure bet. The NFL is requiring private equity investors to stay invested for at least six years; that means they can’t stage the kind of activist raid that PE is known for. And no matter which team a firm buys into, that firm will be able to sell its stake for a profit as soon as it’s permitted.

It’s also a vanity play. When Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post, and John Henry bought The Boston Globe, and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff bought Time, they didn’t do it thinking print media would be a great investment. They bought it because if you’re a billionaire, you need your plane, your yacht, and your legacy newspaper or magazine. Approved PE firms will view NFL stakes the same way.  

It’s also a hospitality play, as so much of sports is nowadays. The partners at these PE firms won’t be public facing, but they’ll certainly use the suite to impress clients and friends. With the rising price of tickets, many of the people in the nicest seats at games now are corporate guests anyway, not real fans. Teams have embraced this and created ultra-luxe hospitality experiences and areas for ultra-high-net-worth individuals. 

Ted Leonsis nailed it in a comment to ESPN. Private equity firms, he said, are basically being told, “Do you have any control? Any role? No, you’re passive investors. You’ll get your name on a website somewhere or something and you get to tell people I own a piece of an NFL team.”

That’s good enough for them. That’s the bargaining power of the NFL.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Feb 3, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; Super Bowl LIX signage at the Hyatt Hotel.

New Orleans Home Rentals Skyrocket Around Super Bowl

Short-term rental revenue has already reached $10.5 million.

Fox Reports Big Sports Profits, Eyes New Streaming Service

Football and baseball helped power surges in company revenue and net income.

NFL Aims for Eight International Games in 2025 but May Fall Short

The league wanted to expand from five to eight international games next season.
Feb 2, 2025; Orlando, FL, USA; AFC wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. of the Jacksonville Jaguars (7) carries the ball against NFC return specialist KaVontae Turpin of the Dallas Cowboys (9) during the 2025 Pro Bowl Games at Camping World Stadium.

NFL Pro Bowl Ratings Drop Again Despite Flag Football Push

ABC, ESPN, and Disney XD drew 4.7 million viewers for Sunday’s simulcast.

Featured Today

‘Ultimate Throwback’: The Unimpeachable Cool of Hartford Whalers Gear

Nostalgia and street cred have driven a consistent frenzy for merch.
January 20, 2024; Santa Clara, CA, USA; Kristin Juszczyk, wife of San Francisco 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk (44), before a 2024 NFC divisional round game against the Green Bay Packers at Levi's Stadium.
February 1, 2025

The New WAGs: Sports Wives Building Business Empires

Athletes’ wives and girlfriends are bucking stereotypes and cashing in.
Feb 3, 2019; Berkeley, CA, USA; California Golden Bears mascot dances on the court during a stoppage in play in the second half against the Stanford Cardinal at Haas Pavilion.
January 31, 2025

The Toll of Bicoastal Travel on New ACC Members Cal and Stanford

Cal and Stanford face missed flights, chaotic sleep schedules, and academic demands.
January 28, 2025

It’s Starting to Pay to Be Good at Cornhole

American Cornhole League players made $7.7 million in 2024.
Russ Brandon

UFL President: NFL Used to View Private Equity Like Gambling 

The longtime NFL executive is stunned by the league’s evolution on PE.
October 24, 2024

Endeavor, TKO Consolidate Sports Assets, Hoping They’re Better Together

The move brings On Location, Professional Bull Riders, and IMG under TKO.
Sponsored

How UBS Crafts Impactful Partnerships Across Sports, Arts, and Culture

As UBS continues to expand its impressive array of sports and entertainment partnerships, the company solidifies its position as a leader in wealth management.
October 1, 2024

Nike CFO Says ‘Adversity Creates Sharper Focus’

Amid a downbeat but expected set of earnings, Nike says it sees signs of optimism.
Sep 11, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; The Nike shoes worn by Seattle Storm center Mercedes Russell in the first half against the LA Sparks at Crypto.com Arena.
opinion
September 28, 2024

New Nike CEO Must Do It

The biggest task the new CEO faces is intangible: Refresh the brand.
A Nike swoosh on a building in Eugene, Oregon.
September 23, 2024

Wall Street: Things Will Get Worse for Nike Before They Get Better

Some analysts are skeptical of how much the new CEO will change.
Crypto.com soccer advertising
September 15, 2024

The Champions League Is Back. So Is Crypto Sponsorship

Crypto investment is making its debut in the biggest European soccer competition.