A bidding group that included former Boston Celtics governor Wyc Grousbeck lost the auction for the Seattle Seahawks, according to people familiar with the process. Vinod Khosla's consortium secured the franchise in what league sources describe as a competitive final round that ran through the Memorial Day weekend.
The Grousbeck group submitted a formal offer believed to be in the $7.2 billion range, but fell short of Khosla's winning bid, which closed north of $7.5 billion. The process moved faster than expected after the Allen family signaled urgency in April, compressing due diligence windows and forcing groups to commit capital before customary stadium lease reviews were complete. Grousbeck, who stepped down as Celtics controlling owner in February 2025 after the team's sale to a New York private equity group closed at $6.1 billion, had been assembling limited partners since March. Two current Celtics minority owners were part of the consortium, though their names have not been disclosed.
The loss leaves Grousbeck's group sitting on committed equity that was earmarked for NFL entry, and it clarifies the market for the next available franchise. The Seahawks process drew 14 qualified bidders, the largest pool for an NFL team since the Commanders sale in 2023, and established a new valuation ceiling. Family offices that missed Seattle are now expected to shift attention to the Tennessee Titans, where controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk has been fielding quiet inquiries about a minority stake sale that could value the franchise at $5.8 billion to $6.0 billion. The Grousbeck group's participation in Seattle also removes one experienced sports ownership team from the Titans conversation, potentially simplifying the field for groups led by younger tech principals.
For Grousbeck personally, the timing creates a brief window problem. NFL ownership rules prohibit holding equity in another major league team in an NFL city, and while his Celtics stake was fully divested in February, he has been working with two advisors on a potential MLS expansion group eyeing the Boston market. MLS is expected to announce its 32nd and 33rd franchises in late 2026 or early 2027, and a Boston bid would need to demonstrate stadium site control by October. Grousbeck's Seattle pursuit delayed that groundwork, and two rival Boston groups have been moving ahead on venue negotiations with the city.
Watch for Grousbeck's next move before the September 15 MLS application deadline. His infrastructure finance lead, who ran the numbers on a Seahawks stadium refinancing, is now believed to be modeling a soccer-specific venue in the Seaport District. Meanwhile, the two unnamed Celtics minority owners who joined his Seahawks bid are reportedly circling a WNBA expansion group that has been assembling a Philadelphia application. The Khosla group is expected to finalize the Seahawks purchase by late August, pending standard league approval.
The bid also tells you something about the current owner liquidity cycle. Grousbeck sold the Celtics at a $6.1 billion valuation in February, and within 90 days had a credible run at a $7.5 billion NFL franchise. The speed suggests the capital wasn't his alone—family offices that missed the Celtics sale were likely pre-positioned. That kind of shadow consortium assembly is how the next wave of franchise sales will move: not public auctions, but quiet portfolio reshuffles where the money is committed before the headlines run.