San Antonio mayor Ron Nirenberg publicly requested the Spurs franchise and its parent entity SS&E Sports reimburse the city for costs incurred during the failed Major League Soccer expansion bid, naming a figure near $1.8 million in staff time, legal review, and stadium feasibility work. The request, delivered during a Thursday press conference, marks the first time the mayor has put a dollar amount on the table following MLS's decision to award San Diego the 30th franchise slot in May.
The city spent $1.8 million across three fiscal years on land acquisition studies, traffic modeling, and environmental assessments for a proposed 22,000-seat stadium near the downtown Missions ballpark. SS&E Sports, which owns the Spurs and controls local USL Championship side San Antonio FC, had pledged to cover "incidental municipal costs" in a 2021 memorandum of understanding, according to city records. That MOU expired in December without renewal. Nirenberg's office said the franchise has not responded to two written reimbursement requests sent in January and March.
The public demand changes the power geometry for other mid-market cities courting MLS or evaluating NWSL expansion. Phoenix, Indianapolis, and Charlotte FC's ownership have all structured bids with upfront municipal cost-sharing clauses that include clawback provisions if the league selects another market. San Antonio's experience provides a template for what happens when those provisions go unsigned or unenforced. Family offices and private equity groups sizing sports infrastructure plays now have a reference case: unfunded municipal prep work is political leverage, not philanthropy, and mayors near election cycles will bill you.
SS&E Sports declined comment through a spokesperson. The Spurs organization separately issued a statement noting it "provided significant financial and operational support" for the MLS bid but did not address the reimbursement figure. League sources say San Antonio was a finalist for the 30th slot but fell short on stadium certainty and local broadcast revenue projections. San Diego's winning bid included a fully financed $500 million stadium with naming rights secured before the expansion vote. San Antonio presented three potential sites, none with construction funding closed.
MLS expansion economics have shifted. The 30th franchise fee reached $500 million, double the $200 million Nashville paid in 2017. That fee escalation makes municipal cost-sharing politically harder to justify, especially in Texas cities with strong anti-subsidy constituencies. Sacramento Republic FC, which held an expansion slot before ownership collapsed in 2023, left that city holding $2.3 million in planning costs. The pattern repeats.
SS&E Sports still owns San Antonio FC and operates the 8,000-seat Toyota Field under a lease running through 2031. The USL Championship side drew an average of 6,200 fans per match last season, below the league median. The franchise has not announced plans for a renewed MLS bid or stadium expansion. Nirenberg, who faces reelection in May 2025, has not ruled out supporting future bids but said any new partnership would require "upfront commitments, not retroactive requests."
The reimbursement fight arrives as SS&E Sports evaluates a potential sale of minority stakes in both the Spurs and San Antonio FC, according to two people familiar with the process. The firm engaged an advisory bank in February to explore options after principal owner Peter Holt turned 73. Any sale process will surface the unresolved municipal debt in due diligence, creating a tactical reason to settle before a data room opens. Family offices pricing the deal will discount for political overhang.
Nirenberg's request comes three weeks before the city council votes on a $45 million bond package for sports facility improvements, including $12 million earmarked for Toyota Field roof repairs and ADA compliance. The bond language does not name SS&E Sports but allocates funds to "city-owned sports venues under private lease." Council members in districts that supported the MLS bid have privately told the mayor's office they will not vote for facility upgrades while the reimbursement remains unpaid, according to one council aide.
The city has not filed suit and Nirenberg said he hopes to resolve the matter "without litigation." Texas law allows municipalities to pursue reimbursement claims for up to four years after expenditure, putting the clock on FY2021 costs at September 2025. The mayor's office has scheduled a closed-session council briefing for April 22 to discuss legal options.