• Loading stock data...
Monday, October 13, 2025

Coliseum Site Sale a ‘Headache Off of Oakland’s Plate’

  • The City of Oakland announced it will sell its half of the Coliseum site for $105 million.
  • The A’s still own the other half, although that stake is tied up in litigation.
Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports

The City of Oakland announced it has agreed to sell its half of the Oakland Coliseum site to a private developer Wednesday. The deal will reach a minimum of $105 million, which will help the city make up a two-year, $177 million budget deficit.

Ownership will transfer to the African American Sports & Entertainment Group, an Oakland-based developer that wants to turn the Coliseum site into a sports, entertainment, education, and business district, and form “the first majority Black owned NFL franchise here in Oakland,” according to its website. The group also wants to build affordable housing and outdoor space, as well as preserve the next-door Oakland Arena, where the Warriors won three NBA titles, according to the announcement’s press release.

AASEG has been trying to get its hands on a professional sports team in the Bay Area since it was founded in 2020. The group vied for a WNBA team to play in the Coliseum Arena, even partnering with player turned entrepreneur Alana Beard, but the bid went to the Warriors owners. The group has also announced it’s considering bidding for an NWSL franchise.

Oakland mayor Sheng Thao praised AASEG’s long-term vision in a not-so-subtle shot at the A’s on Wednesday. “It takes a partner that understands that there is a return on investment that doesn’t necessarily show up on that balance sheet. That it’s just not all about the money, but it’s about the community and making sure that they’re thriving,” she said during a press conference.

The A’s still own the other half of the site, which AASEG has been trying to acquire since last year, but it’s a messy situation. The team bought its share of the Coliseum from Alameda County for $85 million in 2019. It was only last week paid in full, and pending litigation seeks to invalidate the sale entirely.

AASEG made the A’s a $115 million offer for the team’s half of the site in September, which was rejected, but the two sides picked discussions back up earlier this year. Ray Bobbitt, the founder and managing member of AASEG, said during Wednesday’s press conference that the group is in “healthy negotiations” with the A’s that are “moving in a positive direction.” The A’s claimed to want an upgrade in Oakland on the updated stadium for years, but ultimately will move to Sacramento’s Triple-A ballpark next season. The team says it’s a temporary stop before moving to Las Vegas later this decade.

For Oakland’s part, it’s the latest in the city’s severing from major league professional sports. This is the A’s final season in the city. The Raiders left the Coliseum in 2019, while the Warriors moved out of the arena then known as Oracle to San Francisco the same year. (The new Bay Area WNBA team will practice in Oakland but play games in San Francisco.) 

Oakland’s two-year, $177 million spending gap is mostly due to a dip in tax receipts, according to the San Francisco Chronicle, although police went $25 million over on overtime spending as well. The extra cash will help the city avoid dozens of police and civil servant layoffs, and the closure of three police academies and four fire stations, which were anticipated before the sale, officials told the Chronicle.

“The budget deficit is not the reason for the sale,” a city spokesperson wrote in an email to Front Office Sports, pointing out that the deal has been in the works for years. “However, it is fair to say that proceeds from the sale will be used to address the budget deficit.”

The decision now moves to Oakland City Council to pass an ordinance allowing the City Administrator to sign the deal. 

“It’s important that if it’s going to be privately owned now, it’s going to be back on the property tax rules,” Neil deMause, a journalist who runs the influential stadium funding blog “Field of Schemes” and wrote a book of the same name, tells FOS. “It’s not just the $105 million that Oakland’s going to get to pocket right now, but there is going to be some money that’s going to be flowing in from it annually in the future, and that’s always a plus.”

The Oakland spokesperson confirmed that the city would again be receiving property taxes on the land once the sale went through.

Still, deMause and another expert in the economics of stadium development, the University of Colorado Denver’s associate professor Geoffrey Propheter, said the deal might not have been as large as it could be.

Propheter tells FOS, “105 million dollars strikes me as relatively cheap for land next to the water in the Bay Area.”

“It gets the land back on the property tax rolls and it gets a headache off of Oakland’s plate, and it maybe gets it developed at some point,” deMause says. “It’s at least a step forward. I’m not going to say yet whether I think it’s the best step forward, but it’s a reasonable thing to do.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Penn State Fires James Franklin, Will Pay Nearly $50M Buyout

The Nittany Lions lost again Saturday, falling to 3-3 this season.
Patrick Kraft
exclusive

Penn State, Adidas Deny Wrongdoing Around $300M Apparel Deal

The school and the brand publicly defended their 10-year deal Saturday.
Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22) celebrates with her teammates after her last second shot to take the lead 90-88 against the Phoenix Mercury in Game 3 of the WNBA Finals at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix on Oct. 8, 2025.
exclusive

Standoff Over WNBA’s Future Has Dominated Finals

CBA negotiations have stolen the spotlight from the Aces’ dominant performance.

Featured Today

Paul Cartier

Sports Organists Are Still Thriving in the Era of Raucous Arena Music

“When they walk out and they see a real organ guy, it’s like, ‘Wow.’”
Sep 27, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers center fielder Jackson Chourio (11) rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the sixth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at American Family Field.
October 4, 2025

Milwaukee Moneyball: Brewers Are Beating MLB’s Deeper Pockets

Milwaukee is holding its own against big-budget competitors.
Kōloa Rum Company Rum Rusher
September 27, 2025

Panthers Bubbly, Jets Wine, Manning Whiskey: The Sports Booze Boom

A sommelier dives into the sports booze trend—and tries Jets wine.
Nov 17, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers fans wave Terrible Towels against the Baltimore Ravens during the fourth quarter at Acrisure Stadium
September 26, 2025

Steelers’ Irish Roots Are Deeper Than NFL Dublin Game

The Steelers have history and the foundation for a future in Ireland.
Nov 17, 2024; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; Detailed view of a Cleveland Browns helmet on a time out against the New Orleans Saints during the first half at Caesars Superdome.

Cleveland Takes New Shot at Blocking Browns’ $2.4B Stadium

A new lawsuit challenges a permit for the NFL team’s planned stadium.
Sep 23, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Stars forward Adam Erne (76) looks on during the game between the Dallas Stars and the Minnesota Wild at American Airlines Center
exclusive
October 3, 2025

Dallas Stars Eyeing Possible Move to Plano in 2031

The team needs to figure out where they’ll play starting in 2031.
October 7, 2025

Rays Owner Eyes New ‘Forever Home’ Like Atlanta’s Battery

The club’s new owners target a new ballpark opening in 2029.
Sponsored

How Jenny Just Is Shaping the Future of Sports Ownership

Jenny Just on bringing her investment experience to sports ownership.
Chicago Bears stadium rendering
October 1, 2025

Bears Want $855M in Public Money for Suburban Stadium

The NFL team details an updated ask for public money.
September 29, 2025

A’s Unveil Sacramento Jerseys As Vegas Development Advances

The club unveils an alternate “Sacramento” jersey as Las Vegas plans advance.
Sep 28, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Cam Hart (20) breaks up a pass intended for New York Giants wide receiver Malik Nabers (1) during the second quarter at MetLife Stadium. Nabers was carted off the field with an injury after the play.
September 29, 2025

Malik Nabers’s Torn ACL Rekindles NFL’s Grass vs. Turf Debate

The Giants star tore his ACL on MetLife Stadium’s artificial surface.
September 25, 2025

NYCFC’s New $780M Queens Stadium Comes With Jab at Red Bulls

The MLS club progresses on developing its new stadium in Queens, N.Y.