Jose E. Feliciano, the private equity principal who bought Chelsea FC for £2.5 billion in 2022, has won the auction for the San Diego Padres at $3.9 billion, according to filings with Major League Baseball's ownership committee. The price sets a new North American sports franchise record, surpassing Steve Cohen's $2.4 billion Mets purchase in 2020 and the $3.2 billion valuation floated during recent Washington Commanders talks.
The Seidler family, which assumed control in 2020 following the death of chairman Peter Seidler, ran a six-month process through Galatioto Sports Partners. Three groups submitted final bids in March. Feliciano's offer included $2.1 billion in cash at close, with the remainder structured as deferred payments tied to local broadcast rights—a mechanism GSP has used in prior deals to bridge valuation gaps when regional sports network economics remain unsettled. The Padres' deal with Bally Sports San Diego expires in 2027, and the network's parent, Diamond Sports Group, is operating under Chapter 11 protection.
Feliciano's Chelsea playbook offers clues to his Padres thesis. At Stamford Bridge, he installed a data infrastructure team from Zelus Analytics within 90 days of closing, renegotiated kit and training-ground naming deals to pull forward $180 million in cash, and flipped three academy products for a combined £104 million in profit before their 23rd birthdays. The Padres enter his tenure with a $255 million payroll, the fourth-highest in baseball, and a farm system ranked 18th by Baseball America. The gap between operating expenses and revenue—estimated at $60 million to $80 million annually—suggests immediate pressure to monetize assets or refresh sponsorship inventory. Petco Park's naming deal with Petco runs through 2027 at a reported $12 million per year, well below the $20 million to $25 million average for comparable venues in the past 24 months.
The sale also clarifies succession risk that has hung over the Padres since Seidler's death in December 2023. Seidler had borrowed aggressively to fund payroll, signing Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts, and Yu Darvish to deals exceeding $600 million in total commitments. His widow and siblings inherited a capital structure that included $400 million in term debt and a minority stake held by Ron Fowler, the previous controlling owner, who retained board seats and approval rights over certain transactions. Feliciano's bid bought out Fowler's position in full, eliminating a governance layer that had slowed decisions on everything from front-office hires to stadium renovations.
What happens next turns on two decisions Feliciano will face before Opening Day 2027. First, whether to retain president of baseball operations A.J. Preller, whose contract expires in October 2026 and whose aggressive trade history—he has dealt 31 prospects ranked in Baseball America's top 100 since 2020—has produced three playoff appearances but no pennant. Second, whether to pursue a local streaming alternative to Bally Sports or join MLB's in-house platform, which pays teams a flat $60 million annually but surrenders long-term upside. The Padres drew 2.96 million fans in 2025, sixth in MLB, and their ticket revenue of approximately $210 million makes them less dependent on broadcast cash than clubs in smaller markets, giving Feliciano room to bet on direct-to-consumer distribution if the math works.
Two names to watch in the transition: Tom Glick, Chelsea's president of business operations, who joined Feliciano from the NFL's Panthers and has managed three ownership changes in eight years, and Jason Bram, a partner at Cleary Gottlieb who structured the Chelsea acquisition and has worked on four prior MLB sales. Glick was in San Diego last week for meetings with the stadium authority and the San Diego Tourism Marketing District, which contributes $17 million annually to Petco Park operations under a 2015 agreement. That agreement comes up for renewal in 2028, and early conversations about extending it—potentially to fund scoreboard and concourse upgrades—will signal whether Feliciano intends to operate the Padres as a long-term asset or position it for a flip once broadcast economics stabilize.
MLB's finance committee meets May 12 to review the sale. Approval requires 23 of 30 votes, a threshold considered certain given Feliciano's clean record with English football regulators and his net worth, estimated by Bloomberg at $4.7 billion. The deal is expected to close by June 30, in time for the July transaction freeze around the trade deadline.
The takeaway
Feliciano's $3.9B Padres bid imports Chelsea's monetization playbook into a franchise with payroll risk and expiring broadcast rights.
ownershippadresmlbprivate equityvaluationmedia rights
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