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View Full Version : People of New Jersey(if anyone here besides me), interested in the Florida Marlins?



Crossblades
12-02-2005, 12:15 AM
Because there is a chance we might get them :)

http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20051201&content_id=1274448&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb



MIAMI -- South Florida and seven markets outside of the state have expressed interest in finding a new home for the Marlins.
Team president David Samson told the Miami Herald that the club has heard from seven cities interested in luring the Marlins out of South Florida.

On Nov. 22, Samson announced that the Marlins have been granted permission from Major League Baseball to seek relocation. Samson did not confirm the cities that have made contact, but already officials in Portland, Ore., and East Rutherford, N.J., have confirmed they've made contact. Puerto Rico also has expressed interest.

While no one is confirming publicly, Las Vegas is regarded as a front-runner, along with Portland.

"We're in the process of exploring, and that process takes time," Samson told the Herald.

The Marlins were cleared to seek relocation after the club termed their proposed deal to build a 38,000-seat, retractable-roof stadium next to the Orange Bowl in Miami collapsed recently.

The club had been hopeful of finalizing the $385 million project. The Marlins were putting forth $212 million, and there was a gap of $70 million when the deal fell apart.

The most realistic option for the Marlins remaining in the Miami area is working out a deal with Miami-Dade County officials and Wayne Huizenga for a new building on land near Dolphins Stadium.

The Marlins have played at Dolphins Stadium since their inception in 1993. Samson told the Herald that the team and Huizenga have agreed about the price of the land, but there is a funding gap of at least $80 million. Samson termed building a stadium on the land "realistic" but a "long shot."

Since stating the Marlins no longer have a deal with the city of Miami, animosity has surfaced between Samson and Miami city manager Joe Arriola. On Wednesday, Arriola criticized Samson and team owner Jeffrey Loria in an interview on sports radio 790 The Ticket.

Arriola also criticized Marlins ownership in an interview with the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, saying: "They're not local people. ... No local investor in their right mind would invest with them because of the terms that they wanted."

Responding to critical remarks by Arriola, Samson was quoted in the Herald as saying: "It's disturbing as a resident of South Florida that decisions are being made that may not necessarily reflect the desires of its constituents. ... [And it is] disheartening that Mr. Arriola continues in vain to try to get Jeffrey Loria to sell the team to an owner that is somehow connected to him."

Arriola added the team would be better off getting a stadium in South Florida if they sold to "local owners" in Miami.

Samson maintains Loria is the "local owner" who has dipped deep into his pockets in an effort to secure the long-term stability of the franchise in South Florida. Since Loria assumed ownership in 2002, the team has enjoyed its greatest stretch of success. After finishing 79-83 in 2002, the Marlins won the World Series in 2003 and followed that up with two more winning seasons.

The Marlins were leading the National League Wild Card race on Sept. 14 before the team slumped at the end of the year, ending up with an 83-79 mark.

Now without definite plans for a stadium on the immediate horizon, the Marlins are in the process of dramatically reducing payroll down from $65 million in 2005 to perhaps under $40 million.

The Marlins are committed to playing at Dolphins Stadium through 2007, and their agreement with the stadium expires after the 2010 season. So the team will remain where it is now for at least two more years and no longer than five seasons.