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Seattle Kraken ownership explores sale five years in, $650M entry already underwater

NBA expansion timeline and Climate Pledge Arena economics force private equity calculus on hockey's newest franchise.

Published May 2, 2026 Source The Athletic From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Seattle Kraken
PAPER · May 2, 2026
WELL POUR · May 2, 2026

Seattle Kraken ownership explores sale five years in, $650M entry already underwater

NBA expansion timeline and Climate Pledge Arena economics force private equity calculus on hockey's newest franchise.

The Seattle Kraken ownership group has engaged advisors to explore a full or partial sale of the NHL franchise, five years after writing a $650 million expansion check that now looks mistimed against both on-ice results and the looming return of professional basketball to the market. The conversations are preliminary but involve multiple family offices and at least one private equity platform familiar with the Climate Pledge Arena lease structure, according to two people with knowledge of the process.

The franchise has missed the playoffs three of four completed seasons, drawing an average of 16,473 fans per game this year, down 8% from the 17,873 sellout pace of its inaugural season. Revenue is tracking near $185 million annually, below the $210 million the ownership group underwrote in its original operating model, which assumed consistent postseason gates and deeper corporate sponsorship penetration in a market Amazon already dominates. The Kraken carry roughly $420 million in net debt after arena renovations and working capital draws, leaving actual enterprise value somewhere south of the $1.1 billion median recent transaction multiple for NHL clubs.

What changes the math is the NBA expansion window opening in earnest by late 2025, with Seattle and Las Vegas the presumed $4 billion per-team destinations. The same ownership syndicate—led by majority stakeholder David Bonderman's family trust and minority holders including film producer Jerry Bruckheimer—holds no exclusive right to an NBA franchise despite controlling the building. If the league awards Seattle a team to a separate ownership group, the Kraken face a tenant dynamic where basketball commands 48 premium dates and the superior local television economics, flipping the arena's revenue hierarchy. The alternative is raising another $2 billion in equity to lead an NBA bid themselves, a number that strains the passive limited partners who joined for 15% hockey stakes, not a second capital call.

The sale exploration is running parallel to a quiet search for the franchise's third general manager in five years, after Ron Francis was dismissed in September following a 27-35-12 start to the current season. Interim GM Alexandra Mandrycky, the league's first woman in the role, is interviewing but not considered the frontrunner by agents working the market. The leading external candidate is a current assistant GM with playoff equity on his résumé, expected to command $2.5 million annually and roster control—terms harder to justify if ownership turns over mid-negotiation. One Western Conference executive said his phone started ringing the day Francis was fired; by the time a new owner closes, the management slate may be decided for them.

Sponsorship renewals are the other pressure point. Amazon's $8 million annual jersey patch deal expires after next season, and early conversations have stalled over activation metrics that underperformed projections by 40% in year three. The company is prioritizing its new NBA media rights package and has signaled it may not renew at the current rate, leaving a $8 million hole in a P&L already running tight. Alaska Airlines, the arena's naming rights incumbent before the Climate Pledge rebrand, is watching closely; their senior VP of marketing was seen in a suite with Bonderman's son during a January home game, the first such sighting in eighteen months.

The next six months resolve into two paths: either the ownership group identifies a lead buyer willing to assume the debt stack and stomach the NBA risk, or they commit another $150 million in equity to stabilize operations and make a credible run at basketball themselves. The former is cleaner but locks in a loss against the $650 million entry price. The latter keeps optionality alive but requires belief that hockey can coexist as a profitable tenant in a two-team building, a thesis no other market has successfully tested at this rent level. The NBA's expansion timeline becomes the Kraken's sale timeline by default.

The takeaway
Seattle Kraken ownership sale talks reflect **$650M** entry price regret as NBA expansion threatens arena economics and sponsor renewals stall.
seattle krakennhl ownershipnba expansionclimate pledge arenaprivate equityfranchise valuation
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