
As Major League Baseball prepares for Thursday’s Opening Day the annual Forbes list of team values has arrived. For the 28th consecutive season the New York Yankees are on top
but for the first time a team has passed the $8 billion mark. The Yankees are valued at $8.2 billion, far outpacing the second place Los Angeles Dodgers at 6.8 billion with superstar draw Shohei Ohtani – even after the Yankees lost to the Dodgers in the 2024 World Series.
The top ten is as you might expect, most of the biggest media markets in the country are represented and that’s a big reason for each team’s massive number. Attendance, merchandise sales, television rights, real estate values and team payroll all factor into the bottom line. The New York Mets who are 6th on the Forbes list are owned by Steve Cohen who has the highest personal worth of any baseball owner at over $20 billion. Last month he had this to say about the crosstown Yanks.
“I mean, they’ve built a great business over there with revenues that are significantly above almost any other team, and that gives them the ability to do things that perhaps other teams can’t do and so kudos to them. I mean, they built a great organization.”
And revenue is the key, especially from local television rights. The Yankees own and run the YES network while many of the teams in the middle of the Forbes list, like the Mariners, Padres, Brewers and the now Sacramento A’s are struggling with cable tv cord cutters and even losing their broadcast partners altogether. The bankruptcy of Diamond Sports group which broadcast games for more than a dozen teams had a big impact on those teams’ bottom line.
The Chicago White Sox are one example that proves winning doesn’t define a team’s worth. They’ve lost over 100 games the last two seasons, a record 121 last year but at $2 billion they’re in the middle of Forbes list because they play in the third media market in the country, have a payroll in the middle of the pack and broadcast their games on the newly launched Chicago Sports Network.
The gap between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots’ is certainly growing in Major League Baseball and the luxury tax revenue paid by teams with massive payrolls is struggling to keep pace. Those taxes are redistributed to teams in smaller markets like the Minnesota Twins, Pittsburgh Pirates and Tampa Bay Rays, all in the bottom 10 on Forbes list.
The Miami Marlins are last on the list and the exception to the ‘big market’ rule. But they actually turned an estimated $38 million profit last year despite losing 100 games and drawing just over 1 million fans to the ballpark.
For comparison’s sake, the NBA’s Boston Celtics and the NFL’s Washington Commanders were recently sold for record amounts, each at just over $6 billion.
For Straight Arrow News I’m Chris Francis.