Betalytic
Home🏀 NBA🏒 NHL🏈 NFL⚾ MLB⚽ Soccer🥊 MMAMore

Betalytic

AI-assisted multilingual newsroom focused on sports analytics and bet-relevant coverage.

Sections

  • Home
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • NFL
  • MLB
  • Soccer
  • MMA
  • Tennis
  • Boxing
  • F1
  • Golf
  • Cricket

Resources

  • About
  • RSS Feed
  • Search

Summaries and analysis may be AI-assisted. Content is for informational purposes only.

Not professional advice.

© 2026 . All rights reserved.

  1. Home
  2. /Sports
  3. /Shaikin: If the Padres can sell for $3.9 billion, are we closer to an Angels sale?
MLB

Shaikin: If the Padres can sell for $3.9 billion, are we closer to an Angels sale?

Yahoo Sports2h ago5 min readOriginal source →
Shaikin: If the Padres can sell for $3.9 billion, are we closer to an Angels sale?

TL;DR

Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels, believes the team could sell for $4 billion, especially after the San Diego Padres were reported to be sold for $3.9 billion. This raises questions about the potential sale of the Angels amid ongoing ballpark issues in Anaheim.

Key points

  • Arte Moreno believes Angels could sell for $4 billion
  • San Diego Padres reported sale price is $3.9 billion
  • New owners of Padres are led by Jose Feliciano
  • Long-standing ballpark issues affect Angels sale
  • No major league team has sold for over $3 billion before

Mentioned in this story

Arte MorenoJose FelicianoClearlake Capital
Los Angeles AngelsSan Diego Padres

Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels, stands on the field before a baseball game
Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels, stands on the field before a baseball game

Could Angels owner Arte Moreno get $4 billion if he put the team up for sale without a resolution to the long-running ballpark stalemate in Anaheim? (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

I’d heard Arte Moreno had told people recently that he thought the Angels could command $4 billion. He might sell the team. He might not. But the figure seemed ambitious, since no major league team ever had sold for even $3 billion.

Until Friday, that is, when the Wall Street Journal first reported the San Diego Padres were about to be sold for $3.9 billion.

The new owners: a group led by Jose Feliciano of Santa Monica-based Clearlake Capital, which manages more than $90 billion in assets, and his wife, Kwanza Jones. In 2022, Feliciano and Dodgers co-owner Todd Boehly led the investment group that bought Chelsea of the Premier League for $5.2 billion.

The new money should enable the Padres to build upon the legacy of late owner Peter Seidler, who simply disregarded the fact that San Diego ranks as one of the smallest media markets in the major leagues. He spent to win, and the Padres have made the playoffs four times in the past six years — after making the playoffs five times in their first 51 years.

Read more: Angels' World Series hero and even-keeled slugger Garret Anderson dies at 53

The fans rewarded him, packing Petco Park. As of Friday, the Padres had the second-best record and second-highest attendance in the major leagues. The Dodgers, of course, had the best record and the highest attendance.

The party most immediately interested in the Padres’ sale price? The players’ union, since Commissioner Rob Manfred has cited sluggish appreciation in sale prices as one reason to pursue cost controls on player salaries, whether through a salary cap or some other restriction. In recent years, the owners of the Angels, Minnesota Twins and Washington Nationals all have put their teams on the market without completing a sale.

But Moreno should be interested, too. He turns 80 this summer.

The comparison with the Padres only goes so far. In San Diego, in a city without a team in the NFL, NBA or NHL, the Padres are virtually unchallenged for dollars from fans and corporate sponsors.

And, in San Diego, the Padres play in Southern California’s best ballpark, one the team has turned into a year-round events center, with major concerts in the stadium itself and smaller ones within a delightful park beyond center field.

Could Moreno get $4 billion without a resolution to the long-running ballpark stalemate in Anaheim? It sounds borderline insane to consider that the only available team in America’s second-largest market might not be worth as much as the team that just sold in America’s 30th-largest market.

In Anaheim, however, two deals that would have anchored the Angels there for decades collapsed, and the 60-year-old stadium is in serious need of renovation or replacement. A buyer likely would have to account for the billion-dollar cost of a new ballpark and might ask for a credit against the purchase price, effectively lowering how much profit Moreno could make on the sale.

Any potential buyer should be keeping a close eye on a bill slowly winding its way through the state legislature this year. That bill, if enacted into law, would give the city the ability to loosen development restrictions on the stadium property for a team owner willing to call the team the Anaheim Angels.

Still, even without that legal assist, there should be no shortage of parties interested in acquiring two rarely available assets in one transaction: an MLB team in the Los Angeles market, and a 150-acre site perfect for the mixed-use development coveted by owners in every sport these days.

Golden State Warriors owner Joe Lacob, who once worked as a peanut vendor at Angel Stadium, lost out in the Padres’ bidding and could take another run at the Angels.

Rams owner Stan Kroenke, who lost out in the Dodgers’ bidding in 2012, surrounded the Rams’ Inglewood stadium and Woodland Hills training site with major development and could consider replicating those successes in Anaheim.

Read more: Mike Trout's two homers aren't enough as Angels lose to Yankees

Ducks owner Henry Samueli has denied interest in the Angels, but he could consider extending and complementing his OC Vibe development across the 57 Freeway — and his hockey team already wears the Anaheim name.

That assumes, of course, that Moreno opts to sell. He enjoys owning a team and, in a season in which the Angels are one-half game out of first place entering Friday in what appears to be a weak American League West, there is no hurry.

It is considered more likely that Moreno waits until after a new collective bargaining agreement is reached next year to determine whether to sell. All I can tell you for sure Friday is what one baseball official texted me when I asked for reaction to the Padres’ sale: “Great news for the Angels.”

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Q&A

What is the reported sale price of the San Diego Padres?

The San Diego Padres are reported to be sold for $3.9 billion.

Could Arte Moreno sell the Angels for $4 billion?

Arte Moreno believes the Angels could command $4 billion if put up for sale, though this figure is considered ambitious.

Who are the new owners of the San Diego Padres?

The new owners of the Padres are a group led by Jose Feliciano and Kwanza Jones from Clearlake Capital.

What challenges does Arte Moreno face regarding the Angels sale?

Arte Moreno faces a long-running ballpark stalemate in Anaheim, which complicates the potential sale of the Angels.

Load next article

Related Articles

Inside the fallout of the Dianna Russini and Mike Vrabel photos
Sports

Inside the fallout of the Dianna Russini and Mike Vrabel photos

NFL reporter Dianna Russini and coach Mike Vrabel caught in controversial photos.

ESPN News·16m ago·1 min read
Frank: Clippers' goal remains to 'win with Kawhi'
NBA·Feature

Frank: Clippers' goal remains to 'win with Kawhi'

Clippers President Confirms Commitment to Kawhi Leonard's Future

ESPN News·41m ago·1 min read
Brazil basketball legend Oscar Schmidt dies at 68
Sports

Brazil basketball legend Oscar Schmidt dies at 68

Oscar Schmidt, the legendary Brazilian basketball player, has passed away at 68 after battling a brain tumor.

ESPN News·41m ago·1 min read
Coventry City seal Premier League return after 25 years away
Sports

Coventry City seal Premier League return after 25 years away

Coventry City seals Premier League return after 25 years away!

Sky Sports·53m ago·1 min read
How to watch the 2026 NHL Stanley Cup playoffs with Sling TV
NHL·Preview

How to watch the 2026 NHL Stanley Cup playoffs with Sling TV

Catch the 2026 NHL Stanley Cup playoffs on Sling TV! Here's how.

Yahoo Sports·1h ago·1 min read
Four-star edge rusher Mekai Brown commits to USC
Sports

Four-star edge rusher Mekai Brown commits to USC

Four-star edge rusher Mekai Brown has committed to USC, choosing the Trojans over several top programs.

Yahoo Sports·1h ago·1 min read

More from Sports

View all →

See every story in Sports — including breaking news and analysis.

Advertisement

Placeholder