Saturday, April 25, 2026
FOS Expands to TV More Details

Ted Leonsis Still Wants to Buy the Nationals, Add to D.C. Portfolio

  • Any Nationals sale comes intertwined with a messy D.C. regional sports network situation.
  • Leonsis already owns the Capitals, Mystics, and Wizards. 
Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Ted Leonsis may not take no for an answer—he’s still interested in buying the Nationals. 

Leonsis, the CEO of Monumental Sports & Entertainment (which owns the Wizards, Mystics, and Capitals), originally tried to buy MLB’s Washington, D.C., franchise from the Lerner family for $2 billion, in 2023, before the Lerners decided to keep the team. On Wednesday, he told The Washington Post that he remains interested in adding the baseball team to his local sports empire. 

Leonsis hinted at the same notion in April when he told Front Office Sports Today, “We have a lot on the plate, but we have conversations all the time because the Lerners and [Monumental] are close. … They know my intentions, and at some point we’ll reengage.”

Should Leonsis acquire the team at some point, he would own every major professional sports team in the D.C. area aside from MLS’s D.C. United and the Washington Commanders, which sold to Josh Harris and David Blitzer in December 2023

The Lerners originally expressed an interest in selling the Nationals in April 2022, before deciding this February the team was no longer for sale. The Post has since reported that people around the Lerners believe the family will again consider selling after the ’24 baseball season, if the right situation emerges.

From a business perspective, the Nationals fit right into Leonsis’s portfolio and could solve an issue that has stuck with the Nationals since they arrived in the nation’s capital, in 2005: regional broadcast rights. When the Nats slid into the Baltimore Orioles’ television territory, MLB struck a compromise by giving the Orioles the Nats’ television rights in perpetuity. Thus started a nearly 20-year arbitration battle between the two teams, with the O’s fighting nearly every dollar they owe their National League neighbors. 

That arrangement could have previously been a challenge in the Lerners’ selling the team, but the Orioles’ recent change in ownership, from the Angelos family to David Rubenstein, offers hope of a resolution. Leonsis previously partnered with Rubenstein on a bid to buy the Nationals, giving them a previous relationship. And Leonsis also owns Monumental Sports Network, which broadcasts games for his current portfolio of teams, giving the Nationals a natural home should the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network mess get resolved.

“We need to have scale so that we can compete with the New Yorks and the L.A.s as a community,” Leonsis told the Post. “Having winter programming—Caps and Wizards—and then summer programming—the baseball team and the women’s basketball team—and owning the venues, I think we can compete from a business standpoint, from a revenue standpoint, with those really big markets. In baseball, you really need to have a big base of revenues to be able to afford putting great lineups out there.”

Since taking control of the Orioles shortly before the start of this season, Rubenstein has expressed a desire to resolve the longstanding MASN conflict. Doing so could help the Lerner family inch closer to getting the $2.4 billion price Steve Cohen paid for the Mets in 2020, which is said to have been their previous target.

“I think all of baseball, and all the fans of Baltimore and Washington, would like to see this resolved in a friendly, amicable way in the near future,” Rubenstein told the Post in March. “And that’s my goal.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Apr 8, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Red Sox right fielder Wilyer Abreu (52) hits a single against the Milwaukee Brewers during the seventh inning at Fenway Park.

Red Sox Say Fans Whiffed With ‘Junk Fees’ Lawsuit

“Plaintiffs were not deceived,” the team argues in a new filing.
exclusive

Orioles Owner Met With Jeffrey Epstein

The meeting has not been previously reported.
Sep 27, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants pitcher Ryan Walker (74) hands the ball to manager Bob Melvin as he is relieved during the ninth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

Giants Become 3rd MLB Team Sued Over ‘Junk Fees’ Since September

The Nationals and Red Sox face separate, but similar, lawsuits.
May 30, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; A detailed view of a Washington Nationals hat and glove on the bench against the Atlanta Braves in the ninth inning at Truist Park.

Nats Are Latest Team to Join MLB Media Umbrella

The MLB club is departing the Orioles-controlled MASN after 21 years.

Featured Today

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - MARCH 25: Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever sits on the baseline and makes photographs during the Indiana Pacers game against the Los Angeles Lakers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on March 25, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Why Athletes Are Moonlighting As Sports Photographers

Athletes are swapping courtside seats for sideline cameras.
Quinnipiac women's varsity rugby
April 21, 2026

The Death of Quinnipiac Women’s Varsity Rugby

The sudden decision at Ilona Maher’s alma mater left players blindsided.
April 17, 2026

The Lawyer Steering the NIL Era

In the new era of college sports, Darren Heitner is everywhere.
blake griffin
April 14, 2026

Inside Blake Griffin’s Rookie Season at Prime Video

The six-time All-Star was initially hesitant to enter the media space.
Apr 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Notre Dame Fighting Irish running back Jeremiyah Love embraces NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after he is selected by the Arizona Cardinals as the number three pick during the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium.

With Jeremiyah Love, Cardinals Reset RB Pay Structure

The No. 3 pick has more guaranteed money than any other running back.
April 22, 2026

Chelsea Fires Coach Less Than 4 Months into 6-Year Contract

Liam Rosenior had a contract through 2032.
April 23, 2026

Mike Vrabel Addresses Scandal Before Draft, but Path Ahead Unclear

The surprise comments arrive just minutes before the start of the NFL Draft.
Sponsored

Why Brandon Marshall Bet on Athlete-Owned Media

Brandon Marshall on athlete media, life after football, building I AM ATHLETE.
April 21, 2026

Billy Donovan Leaves Bulls as Franchise Makeover Continues

Donovan coached the Bulls for six seasons. 
April 21, 2026

New Blazers Owner Tom Dundon Is Aggressively Cutting Costs

Dundon became the Trail Blazers owner in late March.
Apr 17, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Sean Manaea (59) delivers a pitch against the Chicago Cubs during the fifth inning at Wrigley Field.
April 20, 2026

High-Spending Mets Aren’t Alone in Their Losing Ways

Despite a hefty payroll, the club’s losing streak is its longest since 2004.
April 17, 2026

Liberty Stars Are Taking Major Pay Cuts to Chase a WNBA Title

The new CBA makes it harder for teams to sign multiple max players.