There hasn't been a team in Major League Baseball to file for bankruptcy in 39 years, and one of the last teams you would expect to break the drought would be the affluent Cubs. Say what you will about their on-field performance, but the one thing the Cubs do annually is make money. The problem, though, is that they are owned by the bankrupt Tribune Company. Having the Cubs separately file bankruptcy would help to speed the impending sale of the team to a group headed by Tom Ricketts for what has been estimated as a $900 million bid. According to Bloomberg.com, here is how:
A brief Cubs bankruptcy would be a legal maneuver to clear the team from any future liability in the Tribune bankruptcy, according to two of the people familiar with the matter. Sam Zell, chief executive officer of Chicago-based Tribune, pledged the company's interest in the Cubs as collateral when he negotiated the deal to take the publisher private in 2007, according to one of those people.However it works, something needs to get done. It was revealed the Tribune Company intended to sell the Cubs on Opening Day of 2006. Since then, the franchise has hung in limbo and a completed sale has been teased for what seems like an infinite amount of times. If it takes filing for bankruptcy for the team separate from the Tribune Company -- which, to someone who admittedly doesn't know much about finance, seems a bit odd considering the team itself is a cash cow -- so be it.
"You take it in the front door, and it's just like you're getting radiation," said Michael J. Cramer, a former president of the Texas Rangers who teaches sports business at New York University. "It comes out the other door about a half minute later. It's clean."

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-13-2009 @ 4:04PM
Michael said...
If the Cubs DO declare bankruptcy, it will demonstrate how team owners have been able to claim poverty for decades – shuttling cash around and hiding it in companies the team "pays" for rights and services (or, in the case of a WGN or WTBS, give the team a mere pittance for broadcast rights that should earn the team a mint).
Of course, these "independent" companies are owned by the same people who own the team.
We won't even get into depreciation of player salaries, etc.
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7-13-2009 @ 4:29PM
henry said...
hope they trade veryone away cubs will never win agian :)
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7-14-2009 @ 10:20AM
iamparman said...
Only in America. This organization squeezes as much money as humanly possible out of the team, bought it for 21 million and is selling it for 900 million and their allowed to file for bankruptcy. Now the taxpayer can pay even more by eating up all their debts. Only in America. Bankruptcy laws need to be changed.
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