Mike Cannon-Brookes, the $15 billion co-founder of Atlassian, has acquired a minority stake in the Utah Jazz for what sources close to the transaction describe as "hundreds of millions of dollars." The exact percentage remains undisclosed, but the purchase positions Cannon-Brookes alongside majority owner Ryan Smith, who paid $1.66 billion for the franchise in 2020.
The deal closed quietly in recent weeks. Cannon-Brookes, who splits time between Sydney and Palo Alto, attended his first Jazz game courtside in Salt Lake City last Thursday, seated two chairs from Smith and wearing a custom Donovan Mitchell throwback jersey—Mitchell departed for Cleveland in 2022, but the choice signaled homework. The NBA approved the transaction under its standard minority-investor protocols, which require league office vetting but not full Board of Governors review for stakes under 20 percent. Cannon-Brookes's holding is believed to fall in the 5-10 percent range, valuing the Jazz at roughly $2.4-2.8 billion based on recent comparable transactions.
The strategic fit is immediate. Atlassian's enterprise collaboration tools already run inside 22 NBA front offices, including Utah's, where the Jazz use Jira for injury tracking and Confluence for scouting documentation. Cannon-Brookes has spent two decades building software for distributed teams—the exact operational challenge facing modern sports franchises with data scientists in Austin, scouts in Europe, and G League affiliates in Idaho. His presence gives Smith, a former Qualtrics CEO, a peer fluent in recurring revenue models and platform lock-in, concepts increasingly relevant as teams monetize direct-to-consumer streaming and membership tiers. Worth noting: Atlassian's market cap sits at $52 billion despite zero sales team, a distribution philosophy Smith has studied as the Jazz explore bypassing traditional broadcast middlemen.
The timing intersects with three franchise priorities. First, the Delta Center retrofit, budgeted at $125 million and scheduled to begin next summer, now carries the scent of a naming-rights renegotiation—Delta's deal runs through 2025, and Atlassian's brand awareness in North America lags its 260,000 enterprise customers. Second, the Jazz are finalizing a regional sports network replacement after Diamond Sports' bankruptcy eviscerated local cable economics; Cannon-Brookes's investment in Australian streaming infrastructure through his clean-energy portfolio company gives Smith a sounding board on direct-streaming capital requirements. Third, the franchise is hunting a jersey-patch sponsor after Qualtrics's deal expired in June—Atlassian hasn't done jersey patches, but its $3.1 billion annual revenue and developer-marketing budget make it a credible bidder if Cannon-Brookes pushes internally.
The purchase also continues a pattern among tech founders treating sports stakes as portfolio diversification with governance perks. Cannon-Brookes sold $575 million in Atlassian shares last September, earmarked for "climate and personal investments," per securities filings. NBA franchises have returned 14.6 percent annualized over the past decade, outpacing both venture capital and private equity, while offering more control than passive holdings. The Jazz, meanwhile, gain access to Cannon-Brookes's Rolodex in Australia, where the NBA stages preseason games and sees 1.9 million weekly viewers—third-highest outside North America after China and the Philippines.
Watch for Cannon-Brookes to attend the NBA's Board of Governors meeting in July, where minority owners increasingly caucus on topics like streaming windows and international expansion. Atlassian's annual shareholder summit in September, held in Sydney, now becomes a potential venue for Jazz branding activations targeting enterprise buyers. The Delta Center naming-rights conversation will surface by Q1 2025, when Smith's team begins formal sponsor outreach. Meanwhile, the franchise's general manager, Justin Zanik, is overdue for a contract extension—his current deal runs through 2025—and Smith typically brings new investors into personnel discussions, per league executives familiar with his process.
The Jazz open training camp in 97 days. Cannon-Brookes's Atlassian co-founder, Scott Farquhar, has not invested, but the two share board governance through their Grok Ventures family office, which now holds a sports asset that neither Sequoia nor Andreessen Horowitz has cracked at scale.
The takeaway
Tech billionaire adds NBA diversification while Jazz gain enterprise-software expertise ahead of arena retrofit and streaming-rights pivot.
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