The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION

Billionaire says AEG, owner of Los Angeles Kings and Staples Center, no longer for sale

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - AEG, the company that owns the NHL's Los Angeles Kings and the Staples Center, is no longer for sale, its billionaire owner Philip Anschutz said Thursday.

The announcement came amid efforts by the company to build a downtown stadium to lure an NFL team back to Los Angeles.

Anschutz said in a statement that he had made it clear that he wouldn't sell the AEG sports and entertainment company unless the right buyer came forward.

"They wanted more than what people were willing to pay," said Paul Swangard, managing director of the Warsaw Sports Marketing Center at University of Oregon. There are "differences of opinion about how valuable AEG is."

It wasn't clear how far along the company had been in the planned sale or how the move might affect AEG's plans to build the proposed 72,000-seat Farmer's Field football stadium.

Anschutz said he will resume a more active role in AEG. Tim Leiweke, who has served as president and CEO and been the face of the company for more than 15 years, is leaving, Anschutz said.

The sale of the sports and entertainment company had been expected to fetch billions of dollars.

The Los Angeles Times reported that interested buyers included Mark Cuban, owner of the NBA's Dallas Mavericks, billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong, and Guggenheim Partners, which recently led a consortium that bought the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Anschutz told the newspaper in an interview Thursday he remains interested in reaching a deal to bring the NFL back to Los Angeles and was "optimistic" that would happen.

"We're not going to make the NFL happen by ourselves," the 72-year-old chairman said. "The NFL is a player here. They have to decide what they want to do.

"We'll do a reasonable deal, but we won't be pushed into a deal," he told the Times.

Last week, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said in a television interview that Anschutz had to find a buyer for AEG first before moving forward with what he termed as "uphill climb" involving development of the stadium.

Villaraigosa stressed, however, that he believes the NFL would return to Los Angeles. The city has been without an NFL team since the Rams moved to St. Louis and the Raiders departed for Oakland in 1995.

In a statement Thursday, the mayor called on the company to reach a deal with the NFL and "live up to its commitment."

He also directed the city's chief budget officer to look into ways to fund improvements to the half-century old convention centre, which had been envisioned as part of a stadium deal.

He said those changes could move ahead "regardless of whether the NFL and AEG reach that agreement."

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league will continue to monitor the developments with the stadium proposal and "remain interested in multiple sites in the Los Angeles area."

An email message left for AEG spokesman Michael Roth was not immediately returned.

Swangard said Anschutz's decision to retain AEG will likely help the process to build a new football stadium.

"It creates certainty for the LA (football) project," he said. "If they weren't getting the price they wanted, and at the same time were getting pushback on their next big deal, this approach makes all the sense in the world."

AEG transformed the Los Angeles landscape with the opening of Staples Center in 1999. Its later addition of the LA Live entertainment complex helped revitalize the city's long-neglected downtown.

The company's holdings also include the Los Angeles Galaxy, part-ownership of the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers, and major entertainment and real estate holdings in Los Angeles.

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