[外電] Atlanta owners' infighting costs big
Atlanta owners' infighting costs big
Affidavit: Group lost $20M since August
By TIM TUCKER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 05/24/06
The legal battle within the Hawks' and Thrashers' ownership group
is causing significant financial and morale problems for the
Atlanta sports franchises, one of the owners says in a new court
document.
Bruce Levenson, in an affidavit filed in a Maryland court, says
the teams have lost $20 million since August and are projected
to lose another $20 million in the "coming months."
Levenson says the uncertainty created by estranged part-owner
Steve Belkin's lawsuit against the teams' other owners has made
it difficult to obtain adequate financing or to bring in
additional investors to help cover the losses, "subjecting us to
extraordinary financial pressures."
The affidavit says the $20 million in losses since August have
been funded by five members of the Atlanta Spirit ownership group
that owns the basketball and hockey teams: Washington businessmen
Levenson, Ed Peskowitz and Todd Foreman and Atlantans Michael
Gearon Jr. and Rutherford Seydel. The affidavit says Levenson,
Peskowitz and Gearon will be required to fund the projected
upcoming loss of another $20 million.
Under terms of a deal struck between Belkin and his partners last
summer, Belkin has not had to help fund the teams' losses since
August.
Levenson's four-page affidavit is in part a response to
suggestions in an earlier court filing by Belkin that the other
owners are benefiting from a delay in resolving the protracted
dispute.
Contacted by the Journal-Constitution, Levenson would not discuss
his affidavit. He declined to comment when asked how the financial
situation described in the affidavit will affect the teams'
operations, and he also was mum when asked how long he and his
partners will be willing to sustain the current level of losses.
"I'm not able to talk about it," he said.
Neil Jacobs, one of Belkin's attorneys, declined to comment on
Levenson's affidavit. Belkin has said he won't comment on the
legal proceedings until they are completed.
It is not clear how Levenson arrived at the projection of $20
million in additional losses in the "coming months." The figure
might include money to retain or acquire free-agent players this
summer.
Levenson's affidavit also says the lawsuit, in which Belkin seeks
the right to buy out his partners at cost, has "created major
morale problems within Atlanta Spirit, especially among our key
executives.
"Our top executives and coaching staffs fear for their jobs
should [Belkin] obtain control of the teams," Levenson's
affidavit says. "This lawsuit has also generated considerable
on-going negative media coverage in Atlanta, causing a loss of
fans and revenue to the teams. The local media coverage in
Atlanta has also held up my Atlanta partners to public ridicule
in their community."
The next hearing in the fight for the franchises is scheduled for
June 2 in Montgomery County (Md.) Circuit Court.
It is not rare for sports teams to post substantial operating
losses for short periods. For two teams to lose $20 million since
August is "a big deal" but "not unusual," said former Atlanta
sports executive Stan Kasten.
"This doesn't mean it's good or desirable, but it does happen,"
said Kasten, now president and part-owner of the Washington
Nationals baseball team.
Generally, the strategy for getting out of such financial holes
is to improve the product, win more games and generate more
revenue. The Hawks-Thrashers owners previously have described
such a strategy.
Another way to significantly cut financial losses is to reduce
the player payroll, as the Atlanta Braves, for example, have done
in recent seasons. The Hawks and Thrashers took the opposite
approach last season, when both teams substantially increased
their payrolls.
The new owners acknowledged from the outset that the financial
losses would continue for at least several years. However, last
summer's buyout agreement meant one fewer person to share the
losses, with Belkin, a Boston businessman, off the hook at least
for now.
The remaining primary owners have, by all accounts, deep pockets.
Levenson and Peskowitz own a lucrative business information
company, and Gearon made a fortune in telecommunications.
Under last summer's agreement, which was supposed to end the
ownership feud, Belkin was to sell his 30 percent stake in the
teams to Levenson, Peskowitz and Gearon for a price to be
determined by a series of appraisals. But disagreement soon
arose over the appraisal process, and Belkin filed the lawsuit
in November.
Belkin contends the other owners breached the terms and timetable
of their agreement to buy him out, triggering his right to buy
them out at cost instead. The other owners contend they have not
breached the agreement, arguing that Belkin scuttled the timetable
by filing the lawsuit and that they have not been able to
complete the buyout of his stake because a final purchase price
hasn't been established.
Belkin's side contends the price was effectively established by a
December appraisal that, according to calculations made by the
Journal-Constitution from information contained in court documents,
put the value of his stake at about $140 million. The other
owners argue that that appraisal, which would represent a 1,100
percent return on Belkin's investment of $11.7 million, is
invalid.
At the June 2 hearing, Belkin will ask Judge Eric Johnson for a s
ummary judgement declaring he now has the right to buy out the
other owners.
資料來源
http://www.ajc.com/hawks/content/sports/hawks/stories/0524owners.html
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