Steve Ballmer is America’s richest sports owner

“Yeah guys, there’s Steve Ballmer who became the richest owner in the United States, we have an “economy” section? “. No need to dip for BFM or The Tribune to relay the news: it has now been eight years since Steve Ballmer, the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers and one of the most publicized in the NBA, is number 1 in his field on American soil, all sports combined.

Money, money, moneyMust be funnyIn the rich man’s worldMoney, money, moneyAlways sunnyIn the rich man’s world

How do you say “The Clippers are better than ten years ago” in Californian? It’s an open secret, since the takeover of the franchise by Steve Ballmer, former CEO of Microsoft, the neighboring institution of the Lakers finally sees the light of independence. The construction of the« Intuit Dome » in the township of Inglewood advances. This new 18,000-seat auditorium announced “at the cutting edge of technology will normally be delivered for the 2024-25 season. The kind of project that Clippers fans dared not dream of before Ballmer took over as head of the franchise. This Tuesday, Forbes published its annual ranking of the richest owners in American sport: Steve Ballmer retains his throne for the eighth consecutive year. His fortune, estimated at $83 billionmakes him the No. 1 of a top 10 in which Robert Pera of the Grizzlies (4th with 17.6 billion dollars) and Dan Gilbert of the Cavaliers (6th with 17.3 billion dollars) logically find their spots.

Reaction full of hustle, creepy or to show the DEA, it’s up to you, but it’s hard to take away Steve Ballmer’s natural enthusiasm. The rest of the ranking? In 2nd place, Rob Walton Denver Broncos (NFL) with an estimated fortune of $56.7 billion. A huge difference of 26.3 billion dollars with the seat of Ballmer, which – barring unforeseen “huge inheritance” type from an owner – will quietly scrape its 9th and 10th consecutive years at the top of this ranking. David Tepper Carolina Panthers and Charlotte FC closes the podium with an estimated fortune of $18.5 billion. Here too the difference – of 38.2 billion dollars – is staggering. Then follow Robert PearSteve Cohen of the New York Mets (MLB), Daniel Gilbert, Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys (NFL), the multi-owner Stanley Kroenke Los Angeles Rams, Arsenal Football Club, Denver Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche and Colorado Rapids, then Stephen Ross of Miami Dolphins (NFL) and Shahid Khan of Jacksonville Jaguars (NFL) and Fulham Football Club . Then far, very far behind, Eytan Hanouna of the Chamois Niortais.

No Saïd Chabane or Gérard Lopez, once once more French football is very poorly represented internationally. You know the guy who didn’t really understand the principle of classification.

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