http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_5123653
Checketts gets league consent to shop team
Rocky says the RSL owner is showing interest in building a stadium at the Fairpark
By Michael C. Lewis,
Heather May
and Matt Canham
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 01/31/2007 09:01:08 AM MST
Click photo to enlargeDave Checketts«1»Related
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If Dave Checketts sells Real Salt Lake, he is welcome to court potential buyers in St. Louis. But Utah's capital hopes to woo the team's owner to a place closer to home: the state Fairpark.
Major League Soccer has agreed to let Checketts explore St. Louis "as an option" for relocating his team, according to league sources.
In the St. Louis option, Checketts - who owns a National Hockey League team in the Midwestern city - likely would sell the team to a group led by attorney Jeff Cooper. These investors have been trying to land an MLS expansion franchise for the city. They also have been trying to negotiate a stadium deal that could include youth fields and a soccer academy in suburban Collinsville, Ill. - similar to the deal RSL hoped to work out in Utah.
League spokesman Dan Courtemanche declined to comment Tuesday on RSL, but acknowledged MLS has "had discussions with potential owners in St. Louis for the better part of two years."
Noting that the group had some 20 representatives in a luxury suite at the 2006 MLS All-Star Game in suburban Chicago, he added, "They're serious."
RSL executives have conceded they may sell the franchise, but aren't commenting on any possible move - except to say the team is committed to playing its 2007 season at Rice-Eccles Stadium, the final leg of a three-year deal at the University of
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Utah.
After that, RSL must find a new home because Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon this week rejected a request for $30 million in hotel taxes to help fund a $110 million soccer stadium in Sandy.
Enter Salt Lake City and the Fairpark, a potential stadium site that was pitched before.
The City Council will hold an emergency meeting today to discuss soccer and is expected to send a letter to Checketts saying, "Let's get talking again," said Council Chairman Van Turner. "We're going to invite Real to hopefully stay in Utah, stay in Salt Lake City."
Sandy-based Anderson Development wants to keep RSL in the state by buying the team and moving it to Utah County.
Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson has been lobbying Checketts and state leaders, including Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., on the Fairpark. The mayor said Monday the team owner is showing interest.
"He would be very willing to consider that if we could get the support from the governor and others at the state level to help make it possible," Anderson said.
The state owns the Fairpark, and either the Legislature or the Fairpark's board would have to agree to lease it to the team.
So far, state leaders are mum on the idea. The governor - who has expressed disappointment at Corroon's decision - talked to Checketts on Tuesday. And he pulled House Speaker Greg Curtis and Senate President John Valentine out of legislative meetings Tuesday morning to discuss RSL. Valentine described it as a "brainstorming" meeting. Another one is set for next week.
"There is no real plan out there at this point," the Orem Republican said. "We just want to see if there is anything we can do to keep soccer in Utah."
Curtis was adamant the state won't kick in money for the stadium. But, on Tuesday, the Sandy Republican didn't rule out capturing county taxes and diverting them to the stadium - though he issued a news release the day before stating he wouldn't "try to revive the project with legislation."
If the Fairpark idea fails, a Utah auto mogul, as before, would "definitely listen" to a potential stadium deal - and he's not Larry H. Miller.
John Garff, chief operating officer of Ken Garff Automotive Group, said Tuesday the auto empire has the resources to privately finance a stadium but that expanding dealerships outside Utah is a higher priority.
"We certainly would look at anything, but our primary focus is the Utah Blaze," said Garff, whose company bought the arena football club, instead of pursuing RSL in 2004. Garff, who calls MLS a "great product," said his company opted for football because it is "safer," and they could avoid the public-funding controversy.
"We have a good public image," he said. "We don't want to jeopardize that." To make the Fairpark work, Checketts would have to focus on a stadium only and forget the $650 million mixed-use development he had planned around a Sandy venue, Anderson said.
Anderson devised a Fairpark funding plan in June. It was never vetted - and it may not be what the city ultimately proposes. It called for the state leasing the Fairpark to RSL for 50 years and the county providing $17.5 million in hotel taxes. RSL would pay back the money in cash or through tourism promotion. The city would contribute extra property and sales taxes generated by the stadium.
"Soccer can and should be an important part of our state," Councilman Eric Jergensen said. "The public funding needs to make sense."
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* DEREK P. JENSEN contributed to this story.
In the wake of the stadium-deal implosion, Salt Lake County Council leaders scrambled Tuesday to avoid punishment from state lawmakers. And that means spending the soccer money responsibly. The council unanimously agreed to support the "immediate construction" of a parking facility at the South Towne Expo Center with $20 million in hotel taxes allocated by the Legislature. At the same time, the council reaffirmed a written resolution - passed last year - that prevents the county from using the rest of the hotel taxes on anything unless or until it is authorized by the Legislature. While the measure will not become official until next Tuesday, county lobbyists were instructed to distribute the resolution on Capitol Hill immediately. - Derek P. Jensen