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Stuart Sternberg buying Tallahassee country club as Rays stadium fight drags into 2025

The $1.3B Tampa stadium deal remains unsigned while the team's billionaire owner diversifies into Florida golf real estate.

Published April 22, 2026 Source Tallahassee Democrat From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Tampa Bay Rays / Capital City Country Club
PAPER · April 22, 2026
WELL POUR · April 22, 2026

Stuart Sternberg buying Tallahassee country club as Rays stadium fight drags into 2025

The $1.3B Tampa stadium deal remains unsigned while the team's billionaire owner diversifies into Florida golf real estate.

Tampa Bay Rays owner Stuart Sternberg is acquiring Capital City Country Club in Tallahassee after membership voted to approve the sale, marking his first known country club purchase while his $1.3 billion stadium project in St. Petersburg remains in limbo.

The club sits 260 miles northwest of Tropicana Field. Members voted last week to sell. Terms were not disclosed. Capital City opened in 1959, runs an 18-hole championship course, and operates as a private equity club where members own shares. Sternberg, who bought the Rays for $200 million in 2004 and now holds majority control through a limited partnership structure, has kept his personal real estate moves largely private.

The timing matters because the Rays' new ballpark agreement—approved in July by Pinellas County commissioners—still lacks final signatures from both the county and the city of St. Petersburg. Hurricane Milton damaged Tropicana Field's roof in October, forcing the team to announce it will play 2025 home games at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, the Yankees' spring training site. The county delayed a bond vote in November, citing post-storm budget pressure. The ballpark deal includes $600 million in public financing split between county and city. No revised bond schedule has been announced.

Country club acquisitions by sports owners typically signal one of three things: estate planning through recreational real estate, hospitality diversification ahead of a primary-asset sale, or simple lifestyle spend. Sternberg's move follows a pattern seen with Atlanta Braves' Liberty Media parent, which owns or operates hospitality assets near Truist Park, and with NFL owners who bundle stadium-district hotels with club properties in secondary markets. The Tallahassee club offers no obvious stadium-district synergy but does sit in Florida's capital, where legislative sessions determine tax policy that affects both team economics and high-net-worth residency decisions.

The Rays rank 28th in MLB by Forbes' latest franchise valuation at $1.3 billion, matching the stadium price tag. Sternberg has explored selling minority stakes but retained control. His ownership group includes Wall Street veterans and hedge fund managers. The Tallahassee acquisition, if structured as a personal buy rather than a Rays-entity purchase, would separate from the team's balance sheet entirely. That structure matters to lenders and minority partners sizing the stadium project's risk.

Capital City's membership includes lobbyists, state officials, and Tallahassee-based executives. The club has hosted political fundraisers and legal-industry networking events. Sternberg's name adds professional sports capital to that mix, but the club's appeal to franchise buyers or sponsors remains limited unless he develops it into a Florida League–style hospitality venue with corporate outing packages and naming-rights plays.

Steinbrenner Field, where the Rays will play 2025, seats 11,076—less than a third of Tropicana's capacity. The team projects $65-80 million in lost revenue from reduced seating inventory, suite unavailability, and sponsor rebates. That one-year shortfall tightens 2026 payroll flexibility unless MLB advances revenue-sharing distributions or ownership injects capital. The stadium deal included provisions for team equity contributions and assumed normal operating cash flow. A prolonged Tropicana closure changes those assumptions.

Watch whether Sternberg's country club buy closes before the county bond vote, now expected in Q1 2025. If the club acquisition completes first, it signals confidence in personal liquidity separate from the stadium project—meaning he expects the deal to close without additional capital calls. If the bond vote happens first and fails, the club purchase reads differently: diversification while a primary asset faces financing risk. Capital City's sale process likely included a 60-90 day due diligence window, suggesting a close in late Q1 or early Q2.

The Rays' 2025 attendance at Steinbrenner Field will set a floor for what the franchise can generate in a temporary, undersized venue. That number informs sponsor renewal negotiations and gives bondholders a stress-case revenue assumption. Sternberg's club purchase, meanwhile, won't appear in team financials but will show up in Tallahassee society pages and state political donor networks—useful for an owner whose stadium needs legislative goodwill and county commission votes.

The takeaway
Sternberg's country club move times oddly with unsigned stadium bonds, signaling either confident liquidity or quiet diversification as the Rays face a revenue-short 2025.
tampa bay raysstuart sternbergcountry club acquisitionstadium financingflorida real estatetallahassee
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