Tom Dundon is not in his usual seat. The Portland Trail Blazers owner, worth an estimated $1.6 billion through automotive finance and sports holdings, has quietly shifted from courtside attendance to operational immersion over the past six weeks. Front-office staff report seeing him in the practice facility's analytics room, sitting through draft-prep meetings, and reviewing scouting reports typically reserved for general managers. He is not issuing orders; he is asking questions that require prepared answers.
The change follows a 26-win season and the team's third consecutive lottery appearance. Dundon acquired the Trail Blazers for $2.1 billion in May 2023, inheriting a roster built around Damian Lillard—who was traded four months later—and a front office that had not advanced past the first round since 2019. The franchise's local television deal expires in 2025, its practice facility lease runs through 2027, and its luxury tax bill this season sits at $43 million for a team projected to finish 12th in the Western Conference. Dundon is now directly involved in discussions about which assistant coaches to retain, whether to consolidate scouting departments, and how to restructure player development budgets. He has attended two G League games in Rip City's affiliate system in the past month, more than the previous ownership group attended in three years.
This matters because Dundon is not Mark Cuban leaving in frustration or Tilman Fertitta cutting costs. He is methodically cataloging how the franchise spends $215 million annually across payroll, facilities, and basketball operations. Team sources describe a posture closer to private-equity diligence than impatient meddling. Dundon built TopGolf into a $4 billion exit and turned the Carolina Hurricanes from a $420 million acquisition into a franchise now valued near $1.1 billion by installing process discipline, not star hires. The Trail Blazers are bleeding $38 million per year in operating losses, per league filings, and the Western Conference has six teams with better talent and four more with comparable rosters. Dundon is treating this as a turnaround, not a trophy purchase. He has already replaced the team's chief revenue officer, consolidated two analytics roles into one senior position, and begun informal conversations with Nike about extending the team's $8 million annual kit deal early in exchange for expanded retail terms.
Sponsor executives in Portland report receiving direct outreach from Dundon's office about activation ideas, a shift from the arm's-length approach under prior ownership. One automotive brand received a pitch deck co-authored by Dundon himself outlining courtside experiential zones and regional dealership tie-ins. The deck included projected ROI calculations and customer acquisition cost assumptions, language typically absent from team sponsorship materials. Dundon is also asking uncomfortable questions about the team's local media strategy. The regional sports network deal pays $24 million per year but reaches a shrinking cable subscriber base. Dundon has floated the idea of launching a direct-to-consumer streaming product two years before the current deal expires, a move that would require buying out Comcast's exclusivity window at an estimated cost of $15 million to $18 million. He has not committed, but the fact he is modeling it signals impatience with passive revenue erosion.
Watch the assistant coach retention decisions over the next 30 days. Dundon is expected to attend end-of-season reviews personally, and two assistants are rumored to have already received informal offers from other teams. If Dundon green-lights raises to retain them, it signals long-term roster continuity. If he lets them walk, expect a broader restructure by June. Also watch the draft-night trade activity in late June. The Trail Blazers hold the 7th pick and two second-rounders. Dundon has asked the front office to model trading down for future assets versus selecting a win-now wing. The answer will clarify whether he is optimizing for 2026 competitiveness or 2029 franchise value.
The Trail Blazers have not made the playoffs in three years, and Dundon is now spending his evenings in the building where that streak will end or extend. He wore a team-issued hoodie to the last home game, not the suit he wore courtside in October.