The Paul Allen estate has moved the Seattle Seahawks into active sale discussions, with at least two credible bidders assembling $10 billion-plus offers for the franchise. Todd Boehly, who controls Chelsea FC and holds stakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Lakers, has expressed interest, according to people familiar with the process. Vinod Khosla, founding partner of Khosla Ventures and minority holder in the San Francisco 49ers, is preparing a bid that would require him to divest his $50-70 million stake in that franchise under NFL cross-ownership rules.
The Allen estate, managed by Vulcan Inc., has been deliberate. Paul Allen died in 2018, leaving the team to his sister Jody Allen, who has served as chair but signaled no long-term ownership intent. The franchise was valued at $4.5 billion in the most recent Forbes estimate, but advisors are structuring the process around a $10 billion enterprise value—double that figure—reflecting NFL scarcity, media rights momentum, and Seattle's metro footprint. The Seahawks generated roughly $630 million in revenue last season, with operating income near $170 million, per league filings. The sale would mark the largest in NFL history, surpassing the $6.05 billion Walmart heiress Rob Walton paid for the Denver Broncos in 2022.
The bidder set carries implications beyond price. Boehly's interest positions him as a rare dual-control owner across English soccer and American football, though NFL rules would force him to relinquish day-to-day Dodgers governance under the league's single-controlling-owner mandate. Khosla's entry would bring the first Indian-American principal owner into the NFL and extend Silicon Valley's infiltration of legacy sports assets. His 49ers stake, purchased in 2013 for an undisclosed sum alongside existing general partner Jed York, has appreciated roughly 400% on paper. Divestment would take 6-9 months under typical limited partnership structures, though York has waived first-refusal rights in past exits.
The sale timing aligns with two structural shifts in league economics. NFL media rights, locked through 2033 at $110 billion total value, provide revenue certainty that private equity buyers and family offices prize. Meanwhile, the league approved 10% institutional stakes for qualified funds in August 2024, opening secondary liquidity but tightening control valuations for majority blocks. The Seahawks, with no debt against team operations and Lumen Field lease terms running through 2032, present clean diligence. Seattle's $500 million regional sports network deal with ROOT Sports expires in 2027, creating a near-term renegotiation window that bidders are modeling at $70-90 million annually in a direct-to-consumer scenario.
League approval requires 24 of 32 ownership votes, a process that historically takes 8-12 months post-signing. The estate has retained Allen & Company and Raine Group to manage the process, the same pairing that handled the Broncos and Washington Commanders sales. Advisors are accepting first-round bids through late Q1 2025, with a shortlist expected by May. Multiple consortia are forming, including at least one group pairing West Coast tech money with former NFL executives, per two people with knowledge of discussions. The Allen estate has not set a formal deadline but wants binding agreements before the 2025 season begins in September.
Boehly, Khosla, and the estate declined to comment. A Vulcan spokesperson said in a statement that any transaction would prioritize "continuity for fans and the Seattle community," standard language that signals price discovery over legacy preference.
What to watch: first-round bid submissions in March-April 2025, followed by management presentations to finalists in May-June. Khosla's 49ers exit mechanics will clarify by late Q1 if his bid advances; league cross-ownership rules require full divestment before NFL Finance Committee review. Boehly's Dodgers governance structure—he is vice chairman, not controlling owner—may allow him to retain that stake depending on NFL interpretation. Separately, three regional sponsorship renewals (Alaska Airlines, Starbucks, Amazon) expire between Q3 2025 and Q1 2026, giving a new owner immediate revenue levers.
The $10 billion threshold is the deal. At that number, NFL franchise values will have grown 122% in three years, compounding faster than the S&P 500, private equity benchmarks, and every major metro real estate market. The next owner inherits $1.1 billion in media distributions annually, a top-ten quarterback in Geno Smith under contract through 2025, and a head coach, Mike Macdonald, whose opening 10-7 season kept playoff windows intact. The sale closes before the 2026 draft, which Seattle enters holding two first-round picks after the Jamal Adams trade unwind. That timing is not an accident.
The takeaway
Seattle's **$10B** asking price resets NFL valuation floors and forces cross-league ownership reconciliations for Boehly and Khosla before May shortlist.
seahawksownershipnflboehlykhoslavaluation
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