Chelsea co-owner Boehly goes into bat with Lords cricket bid
The joint owner of Chelsea Football Club has joined forces with one of his fellow board members to bid for the most valuable team in English cricket's Hundred competition.
Sky News has learnt that Todd Boehly is backing a bid spearheaded by Jonathan Goldstein, a British property entrepreneur, in an offer for a large stake in London Spirit, the Lords-based franchise.
The bid represents the latest move by Mr Boehly, a billionaire financier, to gatecrash the British sporting elite, following his takeover of Chelsea in 2022 alongside Behdad Eghabli, the founder of Clearlake Capital.
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Recent reports suggest the pair have fallen out and are looking at ways to buy each other out of the club.
Mr Boehly's interest in the London Spirit franchise puts him and Mr Goldstein on a shortlist of a handful of bidders for - at least - a 49% stake in it.
Sources said this weekend that the other contenders to buy the interest as part of a process run by the England and Wales Cricket Board were Sanjiv Goenka, an Indian billionaire who owns the Indian Premier League's (IPL) Lucknow Super Giants; the owners of the IPL's Chennai Super Kings; India's ultra-wealthy Ambani family; and possibly members of the Glazer family, which retains the largest stake in Manchester United Football Club.
The London Spirit franchise is expected to command the highest price of the eight teams being auctioned, with one of Chelsea's lenders, Ares Management, plotting the purchase of a stake in the Oval Invincibles, Sky News revealed on Friday.
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CVC Capital Partners, one of the most prolific backers of global sport with stakes in the men's professional tennis tour and rugby union's Six Nations Championship, is also bidding for the Oval Invincibles.
Insiders said CVC had also submitted offers for two other Hundred franchises.
In total, roughly 35 bids are said to have been shortlisted for the eight teams, with the respective host counties able to decide whether they offload part of their 51% stake in order to give new investors control of the franchise.
Those 35 proposals are, in turn, said to have come from 15 separate investor groups.
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The teams are in aggregate understood to have been valued at more than £600m in the first round of the auction, with the proceeds distributed across the recreational game, the 18 first-class counties and the MCC, which owns Lords.
The eight host venues play home to teams including the Northern Superchargers, Manchester Originals and Southern Brave.
A bigger-than-expected windfall from the process could offer a financial lifeline to a number of cash-strapped counties, with part of the proceeds likely to be used to pay down debt.
Concerns have been raised, however, that windfalls from the Hundred auction will not deliver a meaningful improvement in counties' long-term financial sustainability.
The outcome of the auction, which will become clear in the coming months, is also likely to intensify other searching questions about the future of cricket, as the Test format of the game struggles for international commercial relevance against shorter-length competition.
The Hundred auction is being handled by Raine Group, which also oversaw the sale of Chelsea to Mr Boehly and Mr Eghbali two years ago after Roman Abramovich was sanctioned by the government.
Mr Goldstein, CVC and the ECB declined to comment on the process.