dougthonus wrote:Am2626 wrote:He’s the chairman. Doesn’t that mean that he has taken on the responsibility of making the Bulls operational decisions. I think the other owners are silent owners.
He is right now, but if he sells that responsibility doesn't necessarily transfer with him. It could, but it doesn't have to. The silent owners probably all love the idea that Reinsdorf makes them a ton of money. Say he sells to a new owner but only his non majority share and that dude wants to spend 100M in luxury tax money and cut everyone's profits to nothing. How long do you think those silent partners will remain silent? They have enough voting power to come together and elect a different chairman.
I think the current conspiracy is that Ishbia has a path to majority ownership when/if the Reinsdorfs sell their stakes, currently owning 35% of the team compared to Jerry's 20% and the kids' 30% (supposedly*). I don't think there are too many 'silent owners' left and they certainly don't control much of the team. Seems likely that Ishbia will be the new owner, it also seems likely that he operates the team exactly the same way and could logically move the team.
Is he gonna be a better sport mind than JR or will he hire more competent people? Will he spend a bunch of money? The Suns "spent" on players but the franchise is valued at, what, double what the White Sox are? What does it do for a team's valuation if the bet pays off and Durant, Beal, etc are a perennial contender like us dummies might have expected? There's revenue to waste on a guy like Bradley Beal, teams are compelled to spend money in the NBA, and paying the luxury tax in various contexts probably has a financial payoff (unless you're the Bulls and you sell out every game anyway and the most popular athlete of all time just so happened to play for you). Acquiring Durant n 'em was 'expensive', but the money literally had to be spent somewhere and the potential moneymaking opportunity was, I'm sure, too much to pass up if the players clicked and they produced a dynasty (or even a playoff team lol).The Sox are also one of the top spenders over the last two decades and what has it produced? Why sign one star for $300mil when you can sign 10 relievers for $30mil each? financial flexibility! Don't think the grass is always greener when it comes to an owner, seems like Ishbia took a good team and micromanaged a contender into NBA hell. It can always get worse than JR.
My point is (gone off topic, don't ban me a 10th time for derailing), plenty of fans are heralding Ishbia as the Sox Savior but I'm not so optimistic. The Suns are a terrible team and seemingly as poorly run as they were under Sarver, can we assume that Ishbia is any more competent or less profit-motivated than Reinsdorf is? Furthermore, I think any new owner is more likely to move the team out of Chicago than a Reinsdorf is. 1, a move could reflect negatively and be bad publicity for the cashcow Bulls, an asset the family will never sell; 2, I speculate the ego boost and desire not-to-be-hated locally is stronger in Michael R than it is in some mortgage moron whose only connection to the city is that he owns a house in Winnetka and went to a university 100 miles away. I bet the nepo baby has less of a desire to achieve even more wealth that he doesn't need, but what do I know?
*
https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Articles/2025/04/16/breakdown-shows-ishbia-brothers-hold-35-of-white-sox-to-reinsdorfs-20-but-reinsdorf-has-the-power/ (who knows how accurate this information is)