Tom Dundon closed his $4 billion acquisition of the Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday, finalizing the NBA's second-largest franchise sale in eighteen months. The transaction required Dundon to liquidate a 37% stake in the Carolina Hurricanes—valued at approximately $1.2 billion—to meet the league's cross-sport ownership restrictions and assemble the cash component of his consortium.
The Trail Blazers sale ends the thirty-five-year tenure of the Paul Allen Trust, which had operated the franchise since Allen's death in 2018 through his sister Jocelyn Allen's stewardship. The Trust had quietly retained Goldman Sachs in August to solicit bids, setting a $3.8 billion floor that three groups exceeded. Dundon's winning offer included $2.1 billion in cash, $1.4 billion in rollover equity from minority partners in his TopGolf and Centria Healthcare holdings, and $500 million in debt financing from JPMorgan. The structure mirrors his 2018 Hurricanes purchase, where he injected capital in tranches over thirty-six months rather than closing in a single wire.
The deal makes Dundon the first principal owner to control franchises in two major North American leagues since Stan Kroenke divested his hockey and basketball minority stakes in 2010. The NBA's bylaws permit dual ownership provided the second league is hockey and the franchises operate in separate markets at least 350 miles apart. Portland and Raleigh clear that threshold by 2,400 miles. Dundon's equity sale in the Hurricanes reduces his control from 61% to 24%, installing Gerry Cardinale's RedBird Capital as the Hurricanes' majority owner at 38%. RedBird had been a silent partner since 2021, holding 14%, and exercised a right-of-first-refusal clause to absorb Dundon's divested stake at $3.24 billion enterprise value. The Hurricanes are now worth 15% more than when Dundon bought control for $420 million seven years ago.
For Portland, the timing reflects brutal arithmetic. The Trail Blazers sit at 38-38 entering the final stretch, outside the playoff picture for the third consecutive season. Season-ticket renewals are tracking at 71%, down from 89% in 2021, and the Moda Center's naming-rights deal with Moda Health expires in nine months with no replacement negotiations disclosed. The franchise has deferred roughly $140 million in luxury-tax payments under the league's pandemic-relief program, a bill now inherited by Dundon. His first executive decision—retaining general manager Joe Cronin through June but declining to extend his contract—signals a summer overhaul. Cronin's $8.7 million salary comes off the books July 1.
Dundon brings a documented appetite for revenue optimization and a allergy to patient rebuilds. At the Hurricanes, he renegotiated the Raleigh arena lease to capture 62% of non-hockey event revenue, up from 18%, and installed dynamic ticket pricing that lifted average gate receipts 41% in three seasons. He also fired two head coaches in four years, replacing both within seventy-two hours. In Portland, that operating style collides with a market starved for stability and a roster with $183 million in committed salary for next season, the league's seventh-highest payroll. Scoot Henderson and Shaedon Sharpe—the franchise's two lottery picks from the past two drafts—are both averaging under 16 points per game, and neither has a path to All-Star voting unless the offense is restructured.
The transaction also resets the NBA's franchise valuation ceiling. The $4 billion price represents a 22x revenue multiple, above the 19x average for the three prior sales. Dundon is betting on the league's next media-rights package, expected to clear $75 billion over nine years starting in 2025, to lift annual team distributions from $385 million to north of $450 million. That incremental $65 million per year would cover his debt service and leave room for a coaching upgrade. The Allen Trust, meanwhile, exits with a 340% return since Paul Allen's original $70 million purchase in 1988, converted to present value.
Dundon's minority partners in the Trail Blazers group remain undisclosed, but league sources identified at least two sovereign wealth entities and a Pacific Northwest family office involved in the rollover equity tranche. The NBA is expected to approve the full ownership slate at the Board of Governors meeting in July, three weeks before free agency opens. Dundon will attend as a principal owner for the first time, sitting two tables from Joe Tsai and three from Steve Ballmer.
Coaching candidates are already being sounded out. Dundon met with Mike Budenholzer in Atlanta last week, according to two people who saw them at a Buckhead steakhouse on Tuesday night. Budenholzer is unemployed after his Phoenix dismissal in November and fits Dundon's preference for credentialed hires with recent playoff experience. Terms were not discussed, but Budenholzer's last contract with Milwaukee paid $8 million annually, within range of what Portland can afford if Cronin's salary disappears. The job becomes more attractive if Dundon green-lights a roster teardown, which the $140 million deferred tax bill may force regardless.
Watch for the Moda Center naming-rights announcement, likely before the draft in late June. Dundon historically closes sponsorship deals within ninety days of acquisition, and Portland's arena has been without a committed replacement partner since January. The Hurricanes' PNC Arena extension—signed four months after Dundon took control—ran $120 million over twelve years, a template he is likely to repurpose. A deal in that range would cover half the deferred tax obligation in year one.