Oakland A’s Prez Resigns, Raising Questions About Las Vegas Move

Oakland A’s Prez Resigns, Raising Questions About Las Vegas Move.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Dave Kaval, the public face of the Oakland Athletics’ relocation to Las Vegas, announced his resignation as team president on Friday.

Dave Kaval failed to secure the Oakland A s a new home in Oakland, and has resigned right after supposedly securing it it a new home in Las Vegas. (Image: Wikipedia)

Kaval, who has led the team for eight years, will exit on Dec. 31. In a statement released by Major League Baseball, he said: I will be staying in California to explore new opportunities at the crossroads of business and government.”

Kaval will be temporarily replaced by Sandy Dean, a longtime business partner of team owner John Fisher and his family, when the search for a new president begins next year.

We are grateful for Dave s contributions and leadership over the last eight years, Fisher said in the MLB statement. He guided our organization through a period of significant transition, and we sincerely thank him for his unwavering commitment to the team.

Kaval was the A’s rep who attended public hearings in Las Vegas and lobbied Nevada legislators last year to help for a $1.75 billion stadium that the A’s say they will build on the site of the imploded Tropicana. (The projected cost earlier this month.)

The announcement of Kaval’s resignation comes after the team cleared most of the final contractual and political hurdles toward that goal. Earlier this month, the Las Vegas Stadium Authority approved leave, non-relocation and development documents. A development agreement with Clark County remains to be worked out.

Until the new stadium supposedly opens in time for the 2028 MLB season, the A’s play in a minor-league ballpark in Sacramento.

Questions Raised

Though the documents submitted to the Stadium Authority earlier this month to spending more than $1 billion of his family’s personal finances toward the new ballpark, many A’s fans and Las Vegas insiders still doubt it will happen, and are questioning the optics of Kaval’s resignation.

Following news of Kaval’s resignation, Casino.org’s own Vital Vegas, ever since it was announced in April 2023, wrote

Kaval is bailing before the whole charade implodes like the Tropicana, Roeben wrote. He’s distancing himself before the deal inevitably falls through, a stink that will stick to everyone involved when the shit hits the fan.

The A’s have zero investors, and have only managed to scrounge up a $300 million bank loan for a project that is likely to cost $2 billion or more.

Article Sources
Venus Williams Reaches Wimbledon Quarterfinals, New Video Evidence Refutes Witness Reports of Fatal Car Crash editorial policy.
  1. Sands Misses Q2 Estimates as Macau Revenue Tumbles 98 Percent, Has Cash to Survive 18 Months or More

Compare Accounts
×
World Series Odds: Dodgers, Astros Favorites at MLB All-Star Break
Provider
Name
Description
Mark Wahlberg, New Las Vegas Resident, Shooting Movie at Aria  Caesars, Penn National Get Big Index Promotion, Heading to S&P 500  Caesars Auction of William Hill Betting Shops Likely to Draw 888 Holdings, Apollo  China to Block VPNs, Closing Loophole to Access Foreign Gambling Sites  Floyd Mayweather Asks IRS for Temporary Reprieve on Tax Bill, Says He’ll Be Flush After Conor McGregor Fight  Goldman Sachs Sees iGaming, Sports Betting Growth Outpacing E-Commerce  ‘Dances with Wolves’ Star Faces New Child Sex Abuse Charges, Judge Sets Bail  Filling Lake Mead with Mississippi River Water No Longer a Pipe Dream  Court Sides with Gaming Industry in Landmark Australian Pokies Case  Saudi Arabia Invests $488M in Gaming and eSports Hub