Sports

/

ArcaMax

Sounders' purchase of Reign FC finalized, ushering in new era of Seattle soccer

Jayda Evans, The Seattle Times on

Published in Soccer

"We believe there is a massive disconnect between the excitement and engagement around women's soccer and the level of investment into the leagues, teams and players that drive this fandom," Popov said, in part, in a news release. "Reign FC is a storied club that has seen tremendous on-field and off-field success, and we're committed to being a steward of that success for the team. We'd like to thank commissioner [Jessica] Berman and the NWSL Board for their support and partnership during this process."

Carlyle was formed in 1987 by David Rubenstein, Bill Conway, and Dan D'Aniello and became a publicly traded company in 2020. The organization — which employs 2,200 people in 28 offices across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Australia and Asia — has $425 billion of assets under management, according to their most recent quarterly report.

Among the wide range of investments are companies like Two Six Technologies, which was founded by Carlyle in 2021 and provides products and expertise for U.S. national security, to Campana Pet Brands, which manufactures and markets products for care and nutrition of all animals.

Carlyle entered the sports, media and entertainment sector in 2018 under its Global Credit arm. The company has already funneled $3 billion into its private credit platform, according to its website. The Reign joins top-flight Italian men's club Atalanta Bergamo FC as the burgeoning sports profile. The latter investment was made in 2022. Rubenstein also leads an investment group that recently purchased MLB's Baltimore Orioles.

"It's a big financial entity," Hanauer said. "But the fund that is doing this and the individuals had their own personal stories for why this is exciting and interesting. That resonated. It didn't feel like just a financial institution."

The Reign are under lease at Starfire and will continue to use that as their sporting side's base with Lesle Gallimore remaining as general manager and Laura Harvey as coach. Vincent Berthillot, who was named CEO under OL Groupe and relocated from Lyon, France, is no longer with the organization.

The bulk of the Reign front office staff — about 25 people — will transition to the Sounders' headquarters in Renton.

Visuals of the union were present Friday with the Reign and Sounders shields on the wall of the second-story office space. Glassware and scarves displaying the Reign branding also dotted the building.

Hanauer and Mendoza-Exstrom spoke with the women's team Friday morning and Hanauer said he shared the news with every politician in his contact list, including Mayor Bruce Harrell and Gov. Jay Inslee.

 

This is the first time the Reign and Sounders have been united as clubs and the first time Hanauer has financially invested in the women's game. There was an amateur team called the Sounders Select Women that held matches at Starfire Stadium beginning in 2000 with alumni like Reign legends Megan Rapinoe and Hope Solo. But the branding was a strictly a licensing deal.

While the business sides will merge, the Reign aren't expected to be absorbed by the Sounders.

"The most important thing is these are two separate clubs, two separate histories, two separate fan bases, right now," Mendoza-Exstrom said Friday. "The most important thing to do is to make sure that we're investing in the women's game in the same way that we do and make decisions the same way that we do and have done with the Sounders. Run a responsible business, put a championship product on the field, grow our fan base and our brand and impact the community."

The Sounders are the third MLS organization to also own a NWSL team. The Houston Dynamo/Dash and Orlando City/Pride are the others.

Portland Timbers owner Merritt Paulson was pressured to sell the Thorns FC after two separate leaguewide investigations found evidence of sexual coercion, toxic work environment and neglect within the club. The Thorns were purchased for $63 million in January.

Hanauer said he's aware of the pitfalls other organizations have faced when trying to operate men's and women's teams under one roof. He admitted he was only a peripheral fan until the purchase became a possibility last year. Now, he's watching matches on Saturday mornings and learning about players globally.

Mendoza-Exstrom was a third-team All-American soccer player at the University of Puget Sound in 2001. She's a longtime season-ticket holder for the Reign.

"I'm aware of what has come before in terms of the business," Hanauer said. "We stood in front of the players [Friday] morning. New owners, fantastic. It doesn't mean [expletive] if we don't harness the best of this partnership for better. ... We're confident this is going to be an amazing partnership and we will succeed where some or maybe all have failed before."


(c)2024 The Seattle Times Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus