José E. Feliciano and Kwanza Jones finalized the purchase of the San Diego Padres for $3.9 billion, eclipsing Steve Cohen's $2.4 billion Mets acquisition in 2020 and establishing a new MLB franchise valuation ceiling. Feliciano, co-founder of Clearlake Capital, already sits in the Chelsea FC ownership group alongside Todd Boehly. The Padres deal closed Thursday, pending final MLB ownership committee ratification expected within ten days.
The $3.9 billion price tag values the Padres at roughly 6.5x trailing revenue, a multiple that outpaces the Mets deal and reflects San Diego's media market ranking (28th nationally but growing), Petco Park's downtown location, and the franchise's recent playoff runs. Feliciano and Jones take control of a $250 million Opening Day payroll anchored by Manny Machado ($30 million AAV through 2033), Xander Bogaerts ($25.4 million AAV through 2033), and Yu Darvish ($18 million in 2025). The roster skews veteran: six players over 30, four over 33. The team finished 93-69 in 2024 but exited in the NLDS. Farm system ranked 17th by Baseball America in the most recent midseason update.
The sale marks Clearlake's second franchise play and introduces a private equity template to MLB ownership that mirrors Chelsea's aggressive transfer spending and commercial restructuring. Feliciano's firm manages $80 billion in assets, with sector expertise in sports, media, and real estate. Kwanza Jones, a media entrepreneur and Princeton-trained attorney, brings brand partnerships and content IP to a Padres front office that has struggled to monetize a fanbase averaging 39,000 per game in 2024. The ownership group has not disclosed debt structure, but league sources expect a low-leverage model given Feliciano's balance sheet and MLB's historical conservatism on debt-to-equity ratios.
What to watch: Clearlake's Chelsea playbook suggests roster turnover and payroll optimization. The Padres' luxury tax bill for 2025 sits near $40 million; trimming aging contracts without alienating season-ticket holders—who have purchased at a 92% renewal rate—will test Feliciano's first offseason. General manager A.J. Pratt's contract runs through 2026. Manager Mike Shildt is signed through 2027. Petco Park's naming rights deal with Petco expires in 2026; the team will likely shop a $15-20 million annual replacement in Q1. San Diego's local TV deal with Padres Productions remains in-house and unencumbered by the Bally Sports bankruptcy affecting fourteen other clubs, offering Feliciano optionality on direct-to-consumer streaming or a future RSN sale.
The $3.9 billion valuation establishes a new comp for the next MLB sale—likely the Miami Marlins or Oakland Athletics relocation scenario—and signals that West Coast franchises with real estate adjacencies command premium exits. Feliciano's first public appearance as controlling owner is scheduled for March 28 at Petco Park's season opener against the Dodgers. The suite he sat in during negotiations last November has already been re-assigned.