By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
  1. Bill Archer

    Bill Archer BigSoccer Supporter

    Mar 19, 2002
    Washington, NC
    Club:
    Columbus Crew
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    #1 Bill Archer, Dec 7, 2017
    Last edited: Dec 8, 2017

    Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

    By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM

    In a plot twist worthy
    of the the worst of novels, the 1996 theft of the Cleveland Browns by the universally detested Art Modell may end up making it impossible for Don Garber to steal the Columbus Crew.

    Irony, thy name is SoccerDon.

    There Garber was yesterday in his ultra-luxe suite high above fifth avenue in New York, whistling a happy tune, deciding between the scampi and the scallops for lunch and getting ready for the MLS Board of Governors meeting where he's going to give the increasingly impotent owners their marching orders on which two cities they will grant the high privilege of handing over, collectively, a $300 million payday.

    [​IMG]

    Plus, with Columbus finally out of the playoffs he was finalizing his trip to Toronto to attend the MLS Cup game without having to decide between a) lying about being stuck in traffic and b) trying to pretend that he doesn't hear 22,000 people loudly suggesting he perform anatomically impossible acts on himself.

    Then an obscure state legislator from Central Ohio named Mike Duffey (R - BiteMeDon) rolled a stink bomb into the Don's perfect day.

    It seems that Duffey discovered an obscure law dating from the 1996 outrage over Modell's craven betrayal which may wreck Don and Tony's plans for being named Kings of the SXSW parade next year. It's a very short, concise law so I'll quote it in full:

    Restrictions on owner of professional sports team that uses a tax-supported facility.

    No owner of a professional sports team that uses a tax-supported facility for most of its home games and receives financial assistance from the state or a political subdivision thereof shall cease playing most of its home games at the facility and begin playing most of its home games elsewhere unless the owner either:

    (A) Enters into an agreement with the political subdivision permitting the team to play most of its home games elsewhere;

    (B) Gives the political subdivision in which the facility is located not less than six months' advance notice of the owner's intention to cease playing most of its home games at the facility and, during the six months after such notice, gives the political subdivision or any individual or group of individuals who reside in the area the opportunity to purchase the team.

    Effective Date: 06-20-1996 .

    (emphasis mine)

    MAPFRE stadium sits on fully tax-abated land with well-below market rate rent and gleans considerable income from the state built and maintained paved parking lots surrounding the place. There's no question they're "tax-supported".

    Since MLS has already turned down a very legitimate $150 million offer for the Crew, there's no question that Columbus is fully prepared to pony up the cash tomorrow and shortly thereafter build the downtown stadium which Garber and Precourt claim the Crew needs to meet whatever ethereal "business metrics" they demand.

    However, as we all know, that's not what TheSoccerDon wants; he wants out of Columbus. Period.

    Now in point of fact this law - which nobody knew about until just yesterday but which, in another signal achievement of Don Garber's tenure at the helm of MLS, if it sticks could quickly sweep the land from sea to shining taxpayer-funded stadium - has not, we're told by the legal types, been through the courts yet and nobody can say for sure how it will play out.

    We can be fairly certain though that one of two things will happen here:

    1) Various Ohio courts - tough luck on that one, eh? - will decide that the Crew will stay right where it is, thanks

    2) An ugly, protracted legal battle which could take years to adjudicate will make a bunch of lawyers very rich and Don very unemployed.

    Of course, as per usual, MLS has no comment whatsoever. Their media office has spent the last couple months refusing to answer the phone and that's likely to continue. They ought to let them spend the Winter in Florida.

    However, from whatever bunker Fratass Tony is cowering in came this dispatch, without a header or a signature:

    “Precourt Sports Ventures has seen the public remarks made by State Rep. Mike Duffey and PSV will not have further comment at this time."

    Now in truth it would be hard to match Garber's craven public act of cowardice from last week's Eastern Conference semi-final match in Toronto when, after promising FoxSports that he would appear for a pregame interview with Alexi Lalas and "extensively" deal with questions surrounding the Crew, he then had his people tell them that he was "stuck in traffic" and wouldn't be appearing.

    (Their eyerolls were, however, well worth tuning in for)

    Apparently he was still "stuck in traffic" at halftime and during the postgame as well. Hell, Lalas would have gladly met him in the parking lot or the hotel bar or the SkyLounge at Toronto Pearson. Say what you want but Roger Goodell or Adam Silver or Rob Manfred, as arrogant as they are wouldn't dare pull a stunt like that.

    The problem may have been that, earlier that day, the Mayor of the City of Columbus sent Garber and Precourt a very nice letter offering various routes to a stadium solution and inviting them to talk with him. MLS/PSV sent an insulting one sentence response - without header or signature - basically inviting His Honor to F*ck himself and possibly that didn't fit DonnyG's carefully vetted "extensively" prepared comments.

    Who knows.

    One other result of Rep. Duffey's letter to the Ohio AG will almost certainly be the torpedoing of Cincinnati's shot at being named one of the two expansion teams to be announced next week.

    It looked very much like they were a front-runner, but a big part of that was always going to be a tacit statement about replacing Columbus with another Ohio team, thus proving that it's not about flyover country but "business metrics". However, with the Columbus legal issues up in the air it says here they're not going to give Cincy a damned thing.

    In addition, they're going to want to take a serious look at locating a team in a state where it appears the law says they can never be removed. That takes away a big chunk of the league's (read: Garber's) power over a team, something they're not likely to cede without serious thought.

    So unless the league is going to change their minds about not wanting to play at cavernous Ford Field in Detroit, this likely means "Welcome to MLS, Sacramento".

    We'll look forward to seeing you play the Crew for many years to come.

    Over the past few weeks I've heard the same question from a number of people which, to summarize, goes something like: "Archer, you ignorant slut, why do you keep blaming Garber for this mess? Isn't it really Precourt doing all of this?"

    By way of an answer:

    In Austin Texas there's a lawyer named Richard Suttle and I'll let the Austin Chronicle describe who he is in a 2010 article entitled "Suttle as a kick in the head":

    Better count your chickens, Austinites, because Richard Suttle is loose in the henhouse again. Everyone's favorite developers' attorney is at City Council today ...

    Now, the very fact that Richard Suttle is involved in this project should give everyone pause. He's the developers' equivalent of criminal attorney Roy Minton: the guy you go to when you're guilty, when you want to get something approved or subsidized that you really don't deserve."


    This is the guy who appeared before Austin City Council last month getting them to agree to do an "inventory" of city parks to see which ones might have enough space for a soccer stadium.

    Now in most places, if City officials want to know something like this, they call up the Parks Commissioner and ask him to fax over a list. Maybe 20 minutes, tops.

    But apparently not in Austin. In Austin they need to send scout cars up and down the streets, tracking down signs that say "City Park" on them because, apparently, the Parks Department doesn't have a sheet of paper which lists, you know, City Parks.

    The question is, who does Suttle work for down there? Well, here's a letter from Don:

    [​IMG]


    Garber himself says that Suttle works for him. Precourt, PSV and the Crew are not mentioned.

    And here, via the Austin City Clerk's office, and the indispensable Massive Report, is a list of registered lobbyists working in that city, all of whom are employed by Suttle's law firm - Armbrust & Brown - and all of whom report that they are working on behalf of "Major League Soccer, 450 Fifth Ave. New York:

    [​IMG]

    There's lots more, like the PR firm Elizabeth Christian Public Relations, which has been retained to represent this whole charade down there - they admit to having hosted a series of "get acquainted meetings" for city officials and soccer reps, although the real question, as posed by Massive report is:

    Does MLS have similar operations in any of the 12 expansion candidate cities?

    And the answer of course is no. None at all. 12 other cities are knocking themselves out, spending significant amounts of money and time and other resources in an effort to land an MLS team. Meanwhile, Austin Texas is doing nothing, asking for nothing and contributing nothing: Don Garber is spending large amounts of league money and time trying to force the Columbus Crew down their throats.

    It's insane.

    However, the really instructive point is the date on Garber's letter: August 7.

    Note that the MLS Board of Governors met at the All Star Game on August 2, and within a week MLS, in addition to giving Suttle what amounts to MLS credentials also registered two proposed team names including the monumentally unique and exciting "Austin FC". Meanwhile, PSV started the "MLS2ATX" website ("a community of supporters working together to bring Major League Soccer to Austin, TX.") and at least two astroturf twitter accounts purporting to be run by grassroots supporters.

    (Deadspin called these astroturfing efforts "oafish" and I can't top that so I won't try, except to note that, since the people running them apparently didn't know how to turn "location" off on a Twitter, everyone saw that they were all being run out of Columbus Ohio, unquestionably by Crew employees working at MAPFRE Stadium offices.)

    As I said, all this and much more happened immediately after the August 2 BoG meeting, making it appear very much like something was decided then that gave Precourt the green light.

    So today as the suddenly gutless, suspiciously silent owners gather in Toronto - I hope someone makes sure Don gets there in time - they're going to get to review the fruits of that decision.

    Now there's a wall well-worth being a fly on.


    * BigSoccer Commandatore @Smithsoccer1721 informs me that an unknown local citizen was the one who told Rep, Duffey about the law.

    (*UPDATE* Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine says that after a review of the applicable law,
    "should ownership of the Columbus Crew initiate a move of the team without complying with Ohio law, I am prepared to take the necessary legal action under this law to protect the interests of the state of Ohio..")
     
    esc0, Robbo Crewfan, KC96 and 46 others repped this.

Comments

Discussion in 'Articles' started by Bill Archer, Dec 7, 2017.

    1. Cavan9

      Cavan9 Member

      Nov 16, 2011
      Silver Spring, MD
      Club:
      DC United
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      I don't think he's a troll. He posted an article from a legitimate news source.

      Even if MLS would ultimately prevail in court, it's not in their interest to go there due to the discovery process. They would have to open up their books to the public record and that's not something they want to do.
       
      stanger repped this.
    2. Anthony

      Anthony Member+

      Chelsea
      United States
      Aug 20, 1999
      Chicago
      Club:
      DC United
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      I am a tax lawyer, so this is not my area. But there are lots of times state contract law by statute governs the private relationship of the contract. And in this case, there is public money involved, so there might be a better case for the state to alter the contract by statute.

      While this is not an eminent domain case, the Crew could claim that the law is unconstitutional as a taking without due process. While I am no fan of Kelo v. New London, that would be awesome if the state won on that basis.
       
      DAFCrew and Sport Billy repped this.
    3. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Why wouldn't the anti-Modell law work? What federal law preempts it? Or what general principle of law renders it null? It was written after the horse was out of the barn with the Cleveland Browns but would seem applicable to the Crew's situation. The law could certainly use some clarifications (what happens if there are multiple offers? Does Precourt choose or the city, etc.) But the team's owner built a stadium on public ground aware of the statute and St Lamar didn't object to it as far as we know.

      Precourt's main options are to break the law by quickly relocating without giving notice or fight a court action arguing the law is invalid or doesn't apply to the Crew. Both have considerable risks for him.
       
    4. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      There is no need for the stadium lease to mention ORC9.67. That law applies to teams, not real estate entities.

      But the idea that multi-state corporations can't be regulated by states or local governments is wrong. Walmart is subject to zoning rules, minimum wage laws, soda taxes, etc everywhere it operates.
       
    5. stanger

      stanger BigSoccer Supporter

      Nov 29, 2008
      Columbus
      Club:
      Columbus Crew
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Having a long posting history doesn't preclude you from the accusation.

      Having said that, proceed as you will.
       
    6. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      But those are not the same as trying to prohibit interstate commerce.
       
    7. y-lee-coyote

      y-lee-coyote Member+

      Dec 4, 2012
      Club:
      --other--

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      How are they prohibiting interstate commerce? Even in the event of a sale how does that prevent a league, that has made public plans of a proposed expansion, from forming a team wherever it wants?

      The commerce between the city of Cbus and Crew would seem to be a matter of intrastate not interstate. Alleged public subsidies may have had some ancillary benefits to MLS, but the transaction itself occurred in Cbus.

      So how does it get to interstate? Can a company owned Chik-fil-a that gets a discounted space not be subject to the law either?

      Am I missing something other than the law has not been tested in the courts?
       
    8. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      The league is a single entity operating in numerous states. While I wish it weren't so, preventing them from moving a team from on state to another is interfering in interstate commerce.

      But it's going to be fun to see MLS fight this.
       
    9. Anthony

      Anthony Member+

      Chelsea
      United States
      Aug 20, 1999
      Chicago
      Club:
      DC United
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Considering that you can find Supreme Court decisions that say commerce is just about anything (tasing and selling a chicken locally, growing grain for your own use) I guess this would be commerce also. But I still wonder if you would attack this as eminent domain though after Kelo yuh can pretty much take any property and give it to anyone as public use is now read broadly. Would be interesting to see that Ohio law says in takings.
       
    10. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      No, if the Crew become city owned, they'll still host teams from other states and show up as the visiting team as the schedule requires. So there's no interference with interstate commerce. It's simply a dispute about who will be the team owner and will be resolved in Columbus one way or the other.
       
    11. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Ohio amended our law on eminent domain after Kelo to prevent taking property from one private party to give to another private party unless it's done by a utility.

      If Columbus falls back to eminent domain, we have a municipal electric company who can perform the necessary transactions. It only serves a few thousand people but is under the control of city council and can take the team, then resell it to a local owner while complying with Ohio law.
       
    12. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      If you can't understand how preventing a team from moving to another state affects interstate commerce, I really don't know what to say here.
       
    13. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      You keep posting as if there is some Federal law that preempts the city of Columbus from buying the Crew. Ok, what is it? No one disputes that MLS is engaged in interstate commerce. That doesn't mean such commerce isn't subject to regulation not just by Congress but by the states and cities where it's conducted. Beer sales are subject to local alcohol laws, merchandise is taxed, noise and hours of operation laws apply, etc.

      Nobody forced the Crew to build a stadium on state owned land but when they did so at a bargain lease rate, it came with the obligation to comply with Ohio laws. Including ORC 9.67.
       
    14. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      According to the commerce clause, Congress has sole authority to regulate commerce "among the several States". The States cannot regulate interstate commerce, only intrastate.

      So, Ohio can regulate how The Crew operate within the state of Ohio. Ohio can not regulate The Crew moving to another state - that is interstate commerce. Only the Feds can regulate that.
       
    15. kgilbert78

      kgilbert78 Member+

      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      United States
      Dec 28, 2006
      Cowlumbus, OH
      Club:
      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      We'll see. That's why there are lawyers. Until it's actually adjudicated, we don't know. Mind you, I'm inclined to believe that this attempt will not work. But making it as miserable for MLS as possible? I'm all in on that.
       
      Cavan9 and y-lee-coyote repped this.
    16. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      As am I.
      I hope they find a way to apply the law.
      I just don't see how. - legally
       
    17. Anthony

      Anthony Member+

      Chelsea
      United States
      Aug 20, 1999
      Chicago
      Club:
      DC United
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Keep in mind to that the Surpreme Court has defined interstate commerce to be just about everything. However, state laws such as minimum wages have been upheld. My personal feeling is that the state loses on this but it may lead to discovery and lawsuits.
       
      Sport Billy repped this.
    18. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Agreed
       
    19. stanger

      stanger BigSoccer Supporter

      Nov 29, 2008
      Columbus
      Club:
      Columbus Crew
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      It won't get that far.

      As stated previously, MLS isn't the only stakeholder here. If the law is upheld, every state will adopt a similar law and the era of threatening to move without more public funding will end for every league. No way NFL, MLB and NHL allow that.

      I don't think it will even get that far. MLS won't go through the discovery phase. Garber is biding his time, watching the shitshow that is Austin, their 60 person support meetings, the lack of support for stadium locations and the rest. What needs to be done by Columbus is to call their bluff with a concrete package of land and investment, preferably Dodge Park or the Nationwide property in the Arena District, and force them to say that isn't good enough publicly. If Austin isn't progressing and the threat of a lawsuit the other leagues are putting pressure on MLS about will force a sale or Precourt will apologize about the "optics" of the process, say Austin was a bargaining chip and try to continue to own the club.

      That's how I see it.
       
    20. kgilbert78

      kgilbert78 Member+

      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      United States
      Dec 28, 2006
      Cowlumbus, OH
      Club:
      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      OTOH, I think Garber, at least, if not the whole league is quite committed to leaving Columbus. They might be willing to put up with a fair amount of pain in order to secure their goal.

      And my guess is that MLS already has a pretty firm package from Columbus that they are ignoring.
       
    21. stanger

      stanger BigSoccer Supporter

      Nov 29, 2008
      Columbus
      Club:
      Columbus Crew
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Meh, this is all Garber. How much pain is he willing to endure? No idea, but the real question is how much pain are the other owners willing to endure to support him. My guess is those are two completely different levels of pain.
       
      Cavan9 repped this.
    22. kgilbert78

      kgilbert78 Member+

      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      United States
      Dec 28, 2006
      Cowlumbus, OH
      Club:
      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Hard to say, but if you look at other long-serving North American sports commissioners, the answer is likely to be "quite a bit".
       
    23. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM

      Ohio isn't regulating the Crew after they move out of state. While they are in state, they are subject to Ohio laws including one that gives locals the opportunity to buy publicly subsidized sports teams. It's a version of a taking and that is in the US Constitution. Amendment 5 in fact, written after Article I. So a generalized complaint about interstate commerce won't fly. If there is a specific Federal law applicable to sports teams, even that might have to yield to eminent domain, even if it trumps ORC9.67.
       
      The Franchise repped this.
    24. Sport Billy

      Sport Billy Moderator
      Staff Member

      May 25, 2006

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      Nonsense
      Preventing a team from leaving your state is interstate commerce
       
    25. POdinCowtown

      POdinCowtown Member+

      Jan 15, 2002
      Columbus

      Columbus Drops the Bomb on MLS, and Don's Dirty Hands

      By Bill Archer on Dec 7, 2017 at 10:12 AM
      No, it's an exercise of a state's sovereign powers. Those are recognized by the US Constitution and SCOTUS. A generalized appeal to interstate commerce will fail unless there is a specific federal statute saying interstate sports leagues can only be regulated by federal authorities. That would probably pre-empt ORC 9.67 but would still fail vs a straight forward eminent domain taking with just compensation paid. Kelo is an unpopular decision but SCOTUS greenlit takings for economic development as judged by local city councils.

      So once again, feel free to cite a federal law that pre-empts ORC 9.67.
       

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