New York Islanders sign 99-year lease, then threaten to move
By Justin Kendall in Sports
Fri., Oct. 2 2009 @ 11:00AM
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Reuters reported today that the Islanders had inked a new deal with Nassau County to renovate the existing arena and signed a 99-year lease. Not so fast, The New York Times reports. Wang is throwing around ultimatums and threats of moving the team. Shouldn't he be doing that before making a deal?
In other Sprint Center news, Field of Schemes' Neil deMause is again looking at AEG's agreement to run the Sprint Center. DeMause is the go-to-guy on arena funding. He's admittedly not a contract lawyer, but here's the analysis of the city's lease agreement with AEG:
AEG is getting paid.
- The first $347,000 a year goes to pay back the six million dollars in cost overruns that AEG and Kansas City rang up for the arena, split 80/20 between the city and AEG, plus an interest rate of 4%.
- The next $6.7 million a year goes to pay back AEG's $50 million share of the pre-overrun arena cost. AEG, however, gets paid back at an interest rate of 12%.
- Next, AEG gets enough money to earn it a guaranteed 16% return (including those interest payments on its $50 mil) on its initial investment. As an added bonus, if there wasn't enough to earn it a 16% return in some prior year, AEG can take out extra in subsequent years.
- After that, $3 million (total, not annual) is put aside for a Capital Reserve Fund. And finally, if there's anything left, it's split 50/50 between AEG and the city. Little wonder that AEG president Tim Leiweke called this a "throwaway provision," and said his lawyers predicted they'd never earn enough to have to pay it.
As far as Kansas City, as I reported yesterday, we're on the hook for $13.8 million in bond payments a year.
AEG is doing a great job booking the arena, but this just confirms what we knew all along: The city gave AEG a sweetheart of a deal to run the joint.
Photo by Scott Spychalski; see more in this slideshow.





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