Oakland Athletics reach agreement to develop Las Vegas site for stadium


The Oakland Athletics are inching closer to moving to Las Vegas.

The A’s have reached an agreement to construct a new ballpark on the Tropicana Las Vegas property, Bally’s Corporation, in conjunction with Gaming & Leisure Properties, Inc., announced on Monday.

Plans call for the ballpark to hold 30,0000 seats and have a partially-retractable roof. Cost of the stadium would be $1.5 billion, with $395 million in public financing. The hope is to have it ready to start the 2027 season.

“We are excited about the potential to bring Major League Baseball to this iconic location,” said A’s president Dave Kaval in a news release. “We are thrilled to work alongside Bally’s and GLPI, and look forward to finalizing plans to bring the Athletics to Southern Nevada.”

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A sign with the faces of MLB commissioner Rob Manfred, Oakland Athletics president Dave Kaval and owner John Fisher (pasted onto the bodies of snakes above pigs with MLB logos, next to a sign reading “sell.”

Before construction can begin, legislation must be approved for public financing, and MLB must approve relocating the franchise from Oakland to Las Vegas.

The A’s have the blessing from MLB commissioner Rob Manfred to relocate after the organization has been unable to strike a deal to build a new stadium to stay in Oakland.

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