Browns introduce Jimmy Haslam
BEREA, Ohio -- The new Browns owner said he's ready to bring "winning back to Cleveland" and proclaimed there's "zero chance" he'll move the team out of town.
A day after agreeing to purchase the Browns for more than $1 billion, a source told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter, truck-stop magnate Jimmy Haslam III held a news conference Friday at the club's training camp facility.
Introduced by Browns president Mike Holmgren, Haslam said his family is excited to be in Cleveland and he's "100 percent committed to making the Cleveland Browns winners again."
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That's been a tough task for a club still looking for its first NFL championship in nearly a half century. The expansion Browns entered the NFL in 1999 and have made the playoffs just once. They've had two winning records in 13 seasons and are 68-140 since they returned.
Nonetheless, the 58-year-old Haslam said all the pieces are in place for the Browns to win, and that if they don't, he'll take full responsibility. Haslam, the older brother of Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam, arrived in Cleveland on Thursday night, had dinner with Holmgren, and attended practice Friday morning. He wore a Browns T-Shirt and shorts on a hot, humid morning, before changing into a business suit with an orange tie for his news conference.
Randy Lerner reached a deal to sell the club on Thursday with Haslam, a minority stockholder in the rival Pittsburgh Steelers. Haslam must divest his interest in the Steelers and also gain approval for the purchase from the NFL.
Of the Steelers, Haslam said "we had a relationship with that other team in black and gold and were 1,000 percent (for them), but we're not anymore.
"I took my Steelers watch off yesterday and put on a Browns watch today."
Coach Pat Shurmur spoke to the new owner at practice.
"What I found out, and what I think everyone found out, is I found them to be very passionate people, very excited to own Cleveland Browns," he said of the Haslam family. "This should be a great mix for our fan base and our city."
Lerner will sell 70 percent of the Browns to Haslam now, with the other 30 percent reverting to him four years after the closing date, a person with knowledge of the sale told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because details have not officially been announced.
"Our style is we are going to be involved. We are open and transparent. We are used to being in the public eye," Haslam said. "We're going to be out there selling the Browns all the time."
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While the papers have been signed, the NFL still must sign off on the deal. Getting the nod from 24 of the 32 teams is required, which will likely happen in the next few months.
Sources told Schefter the sale price was more than $1 billion. For comparison, the Miami Dolphins sold at a value of more than $1 billion in 2009.
The Browns were valued at $977 million last year by Forbes magazine, 20th in the NFL.
Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a statement Friday that he's sorry Haslam will be leaving, "but I am happy the National Football League is going to have a strong new owner. I am sure the Haslam family will bring constructive and able ownership to the Cleveland Browns."
Lerner, whose family has owned the franchise since it returned to the NFL in 1999, first announced he was in negotiations to sell the club last week. The late Al Lerner, Randy's father, purchased the franchise from the NFL in 1998 for $530 million after the original Browns moved to Baltimore in 1996 and became the Ravens. The elder Lerner died in 2002.
Randy Lerner also is the owner of Aston Villa, a soccer club in the English Premier League.
Even with a string of failures on the field, the value of the Browns -- like other NFL franchises -- keeps increasing, boosted by broadcast income. The league agreed in December to nine-year contracts with CBS, Fox and NBC that run through the 2022 season and will boost revenue from the $1.93 billion last season to $3.1 billion by 2022. The NFL reached an eight-year extension with ESPN last year through the 2021 season that increases the rights fee from $1.1 billion to $1.9 billion annually.
Haslam has been a minority investor in the Steelers since 2008, and is the president and CEO of Pilot Flying J, the largest operator of travel centers and travel plazas in North America. He said he has centers in 43 states and in Canada, and dozens in Ohio.
According to a 2010 profile on Steelers.com, Haslam has been a Dallas Cowboys fan and then an Indianapolis Colts fan. But with the Pittsburgh investment, Haslam said he had become "1,000 percent a Steelers fan."
The Haslam brothers also are supporters of the University of Tennessee, where their father Jim Haslam played tackle on the 1951 national championship football team under Gen. Robert R. Neyland, who built the Volunteers into a football powerhouse.
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The elder Haslam founded the Pilot Corp. in 1958 with a single gas station in Gate City, Va. He credits sons Bill and Jimmy with expanding the chain from mostly gas stations and convenience stores to a "travel center" concept of truck stops featuring branded fast food service.
Holmgren emphasized the Browns aren't moving.
The current staff might be, however, if Cleveland doesn't do better than the 4-12 record of 2011, Shurmur's first season as coach. New owners usually bring in their own management team, although Shurmur has impressed many people around the league.
"I have no fear about any of that because I trust my coaches, I trust the players and I've watched the work they've done based on the conversation of this last week," Shurmur said Thursday. "I think we're moving full steam ahead. That doesn't bother me one bit at this point at this point. My concern is getting this team ready to play and our players understand that message and they are doing a good job."
Holmgren would not address his future with the Browns.
"Honestly, my focus is to have guys here concentrating on football, making it business as usual," he said. "The what ifs and hypotheticals, I have to stay away from."
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.SPONSORED HEADLINES
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