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 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   DEC. 13-19, 2019 41  
 SPORTS 
 BY MARK HALLUM 
 The New York Mets are about  
 to have a new owner. 
 Billionaire Steve Cohen has  
 finished negotiations with Sterling  
 Partners  to  increase  his  
 investment in the team by 80  
 percent,  or  $2.6  billion,  according  
 to Bloomberg. 
 Sterling Partners includes  
 the team’s father-and-son chairman  
 and COO team, Fred and  
 Jeff Wilpon, but both of them  
 aren’t leaving Citi Field for a  
 while. The deal allows them to  
 remain in place with the organization  
 for the next five years,  
 with Fred Wilpon remaining  
 “control person” and CEO, and  
 Jeff Wilpon on board as COO. 
 “Steve Cohen will continue  
 as CEO and president of Point72  
 Asset Management and his  
 stake in the Mets will continue  
 to be managed by his family office, 
  Cohen Private Ventures,” a  
 statement from the Mets said. 
 This indicates a shift for billionaire  
 Cohen from minority  
 owner to majority. 
 Neither Mark Herr from  
 Cohen Private Ventures nor  
 Harold Kaufman from Sterling  
 Partners would expand on any  
 details beyond the joint statement  
 issued. 
 Fred Wilpon and his real estate  
 investment  company,  Sterling  
 Equities, partnered with  
 Nelson Doubleday of Doubleday  
 Publishing  in 1980  to purchase  
 the Mets from the Payson family, 
  the team’s original owners,  
 for a then-record price of $21  
 million. With changes in management  
 and a roster revamp,  
 the Mets captured their second  
 World Championship in 1986. 
 The partnership remained  
 in place until 2002, when Sterling  
 Equities  bought  out  Doubleday’s  
 stake and became the  
 franchise’s sole owner. Over the  
 next decade, while there weren’t  
 many wins to be had for the  
 Mets, Sterling Equities developed  
 Citi Field, which replaced  
 Shea Stadium as the Mets’ home  
 field in 2009, and helped form  
 the team’s owner broadcasting  
 network, SportsNet New York. 
 In 2008, the Wilpons became  
 mired in the Bernie Madoff investment  
 scandal, and were sued  
 by a group of investors. The lawsuit  
 was eventually settled for  
 $162 million,  though  fans  questioned  
 the long-lasting financial  
 impact it had on the team. 
 — Additional reporting by  
 Robert Pozarycki 
   Photo by Christina Santucci 
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