Stuart Sternberg adds $15M Tallahassee country club to real estate book while Rays stadium fight drags
The Rays owner who cried poverty for a decade is quietly assembling private club assets in Florida's capital.
Capital City Country Club members voted last week to sell their Tallahassee property to Stuart Sternberg, the Tampa Bay Rays principal owner who spent the past eighteen months watching a $1.3 billion stadium deal collapse in St. Petersburg. The club's board told members the transaction would be structured around a $15 million valuation, with Sternberg assuming operational control of the 280-acre property by mid-2025. The deal requires approval from 65 percent of voting members; the first ballot cleared that threshold with room.
Sternberg's interest in Capital City follows a pattern. He acquired equity stakes in two Naples-area clubs between 2019 and 2022, both handled through LLCs registered to his New York family office. The Tallahassee property sits 160 miles northwest of Tampa, far enough from the Rays' Pinellas County footprint to avoid direct political blowback but close enough to Florida's legislative corridor to be useful. Capital City hosts state lawmakers, lobbyists, and Tallahassee's donor class; Sternberg's name will now be on the membership rolls when those conversations happen.
The timing is worth marking. Pinellas County commissioners voted in November to pause stadium financing after Hurricane Milton damaged Tropicana Field's roof, effectively shelving the public share of a deal Sternberg spent three years negotiating. He told reporters in December the Rays would "evaluate all options," a phrase team presidents use when they want cities to hear footsteps. The country club purchase doesn't move the stadium needle directly, but it does clarify where Sternberg sees his long-term asset base: Florida real estate, not baseball infrastructure.
The broader implications land hardest on franchise valuation. Sternberg bought his majority stake in the Rays for $200 million in 2004; Forbes now pegs the club at $1.3 billion, but that number assumes a stadium solution materializes. Without a new ballpark, the Rays operate out of a forty-year-old dome with shrinking attendance—16,515 per game in 2024, second-worst in MLB—and a lease that expires in 2027. Montreal remains a standing offer for relocation; Nashville and Charlotte have made noise. Sternberg adding Tallahassee country club equity while stadium talks stall sends a signal to potential buyers: the owner's attention is diversifying.
Sponsor renewal cycles complicate this further. Tropicana holds naming rights through 2026; the deal pays the Rays roughly $2.5 million annually, a figure that reflects the stadium's limited corporate hospitality inventory. A new ballpark was supposed to unlock premium suites and club-level sponsorships, the revenue streams that closed the gap between Tampa Bay and mid-market peers. Without that, the Rays' next broadcast rights negotiation—$82 million per year through 2026—looks vulnerable. Bally Sports Florida's parent company is in bankruptcy; the regional sports network model is contracting. Sternberg knows the math.
What to watch: Pinellas County's next stadium vote is tentatively scheduled for late March, contingent on revised financing terms from the Rays. If that timeline slips past May, the team's offseason planning cycle will assume Tropicana Field operations through 2027 at minimum. Separately, track any additional Florida real estate filings under Sternberg-linked LLCs; the country club purchase suggests a broader repositioning. MLB's next owners' meeting is in mid-February; relocation discussions are not on the formal agenda but tend to surface in hallway clusters.
The Rays open spring training in Port Charlotte on February 14. Sternberg will be asked about the stadium. He will say the same things he said in December. The country club closes in June.