The NBA Board of Governors approved the sale of the Portland Trail Blazers to a consortium led by Tom Dundon for a reported $2.5 billion, marking the second-highest franchise sale in league history and placing Dundon among the rare operators controlling two major North American sports properties. The vote concluded a five-month auction that attracted at least seven bidding groups and pushed Portland's valuation 47 percent above the $1.7 billion asking price the Allen family estate set in September.
Dundon, who bought the Carolina Hurricanes for $420 million in 2018 and saw that franchise's enterprise value triple to roughly $1.3 billion by Forbes' 2024 estimates, brings a documented taste for revenue-per-fan optimization and non-traditional sponsorship inventory. His Portland group includes investment vehicles tied to Nashville healthcare executive Bill Frist and two family offices that declined identification through the league's disclosure process. The Allen family's executor confirmed the transaction clears probate requirements tied to Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's 2018 estate, which owned the Blazers since 1988 and held the franchise through three playoff droughts and one Finals appearance.
The $2.5 billion print arrives as NBA team valuations outpace revenue growth by the widest margin in a decade. Portland generated $291 million in basketball-related income last season per league revenue-sharing disclosures, placing the sale at an 8.6x revenue multiple compared to the league average of 7.2x over the past three transactions. That premium reflects two factors team finance officers across the league are already modeling: the incoming media rights deal expected to lift the salary cap 15-18 percent annually through 2030, and Portland's standing as the 22nd-largest U.S. media market with no NFL or MLB competition for corporate hospitality dollars. Dundon's group inherits a roster with $178 million in committed salary through 2026 and a Moda Center lease that runs through 2035 with the city holding naming rights reversion clauses if attendance falls below 15,800 per game for two consecutive seasons.
What matters for other team operators is the signaling: Dundon's willingness to pay 8.6x revenue for a franchise that missed the playoffs four of the past five seasons suggests institutional buyers now model NBA assets as appreciation vehicles first and operating businesses second. League officials privately noted three of the seven bidding groups included sovereign wealth participation, continuing a pattern visible in recent Phoenix ($4 billion, 2023) and Dallas minority stake ($3.5 billion implied valuation, 2023) transactions. The approval also clarifies the league's stance on cross-sport ownership after blocking previous attempts—Dundon's dual control of NHL and NBA properties establishes precedent for similar structures if media rights remain league-specific rather than bundled.
Dundon's first visible moves will likely center on basketball operations leadership. The Blazers entered this season with interim general manager Joe Cronin working without a contract extension and head coach Chauncey Billups drawing scrutiny after a 33-49 2023-24 finish. League sources expect Dundon to interview at least two external GM candidates before Portland's April 15 tax deadline, when the franchise faces a $42 million luxury tax bill if it keeps its current roster intact. Meanwhile, Nike's headquarters sits 12 miles west of the Moda Center, and three executives there confirmed the company has held preliminary discussions about expanding its Blazers jersey partnership beyond the current $9 million annual deal that expires in 2027.
The transaction closes approximately 90 days from Board approval, per standard league timelines. Portland's front office expects Dundon in the building for the February 6 game against Miami, when the franchise plans to introduce him to suite holders and announce a downtown development project tied to the Moda Center's south plaza.