José E. Feliciano and Kwanza Jones finalized the purchase of the San Diego Padres for $3.9 billion, resetting the high-water mark for Major League Baseball franchise valuations. The deal closed Thursday, ending the Seidler family's stewardship after Peter Seidler's death in November 2023. Feliciano, who co-founded $85 billion private-equity shop Clearlake Capital and sits on Chelsea FC's ownership board alongside Todd Boehly, now owns the league's ninth-most-valuable franchise outright with his wife.
The $3.9 billion figure exceeds the Mets' $2.4 billion sale to Steve Cohen in 2020 by 63 percent and lands $400 million above the Commanders' $3.5 billion NFL sale in 2023. It prices the Padres at roughly 8.7x trailing revenue, a multiple that reflects San Diego's new local media reality—the club reclaimed broadcast rights after Diamond Sports' bankruptcy—and the scarcity premium on coastal franchises with controlled real estate. Feliciano inherits a payroll north of $200 million, long-term commitments to Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts, and Yu Darvish, and a fanbase that watched the club miss the playoffs in 2024 after three consecutive postseason appearances.
The deal matters because it imports private-equity operating principles into a franchise that spent aggressively under Seidler but lacked the institutional scaffolding Clearlake deploys across its 400-plus portfolio companies. Feliciano's Chelsea role—where Clearlake and Boehly spent $1 billion on transfers in two years and installed a data-driven scouting apparatus—suggests he will professionalize the Padres' front office, likely adding quant-heavy analysts and tightening the feedback loop between player acquisition and revenue modeling. Expect a new president of business operations within 90 days, someone with sports-and-entertainment crossover experience who can monetize the Petco Park district Seidler began developing. The broadcast-rights reclamation is the lever: the Padres can now package streaming, linear, and in-venue inventory as a single bundle for sponsors, a model that commands 20-30 percent premiums in markets where teams own distribution.
Watch for coordinator hires in analytics and revenue operations before Spring Training, plus a quiet audit of the player-development pipeline—Clearlake's M.O. is to spend on infrastructure before roster. The next media deal, likely structured as a direct-to-consumer play with a regional sports network partner, will be negotiated by someone Feliciano brings in, not the incumbent broadcast team. And the Chelsea comparison extends to naming rights: Petco's deal runs through 2027, and Feliciano will almost certainly push for a $15-20 million annual replacement that ties a financial-services or technology brand to the stadium and the surrounding real estate.
The Seidler estate walked with a $2.1 billion gain on the family's original basis, but the price Feliciano paid reflects what allocators already knew: MLB franchises with in-market broadcast control and urban real-estate optionality are trading at NBA multiples now, and the next buyer will pay more.