A billionaire ownership group is marketing a major-market MLB franchise at a valuation near $2 billion, according to people familiar with the process. The sale exploration follows the San Diego Padres' $3.9 billion record transaction to Chelsea Football Club owner José E. Feliciano, which closed earlier this month and immediately reset franchise pricing across the league.
The selling group has engaged advisors and begun preliminary conversations with potential buyers, though no formal auction timeline has been established. The franchise operates in a top-15 media market with existing stadium infrastructure and sponsorship contracts that run through at least 2027. The sellers view the Padres outcome as validation that institutional capital will price MLB assets above $3 billion for premier properties, making this a logical exit window for teams in the tier below.
The Padres sale matters because it brought a new buyer profile into baseball ownership. Feliciano runs Clearlake Capital, a private equity firm with $85 billion in assets under management, and already owns Chelsea FC in partnership with Todd Boehly. That combination signals to other ownership groups that financial sponsors and cross-sport portfolio buyers will now compete for MLB franchises at valuations that were theoretical 18 months ago. The Baltimore Orioles sold for $1.725 billion in 2024; the Padres deal represents a 126% premium to that benchmark in under 12 months. Family offices and sovereign wealth allocators are watching. If this $2 billion franchise finds a buyer near ask, it confirms the Padres number was not an outlier but a reset.
The sale also tests whether MLB's media uncertainty depresses valuations or creates entry points. Regional sports network economics remain unresolved for 11 franchises following Diamond Sports Group's restructuring. The league has indicated it will operate a direct-to-consumer product for affected teams starting in 2025, but revenue guarantees are not yet public. Buyers will need to model two scenarios: one where local streaming replaces $50-70 million in annual RSN fees at 60-70% of prior value, and one where MLB centralizes rights and redistributes revenue more evenly. The seller's advisors are reportedly emphasizing stadium control, sponsorship inventory, and market size as hedges against media volatility. The pitch is that a top-15 team with owned real estate and a clean balance sheet is worth $2 billion regardless of how baseball solves its broadcast problem.
Watch for three follow-on events. First, whether any of the six ownership groups that were part of the Padres process but did not win now pivot to this asset. Second, whether the selling group allows a phased transaction—a majority stake now, full buyout in 24-36 months—which would mirror the structure used in recent NBA sales and reduce upfront capital requirements for bidders. Third, whether MLB's ownership committee accelerates its review process, which historically takes 6-9 months but has been shortened to 4-5 months for deals involving known entities or institutional buyers with sports portfolio experience.
The advisors started calling in the 72 hours after the Padres announcement hit the wire. That tells you what the sellers already knew: the window is open, and it will not stay open if baseball's next labor negotiation or media deal disappoints.