Home Subscribe Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Business


Buying into the Green Machine

Report: Harrah's boss to get stake in Boston Celtics

Harrah's Entertainment's top executive is entering a new outside venture: professional team ownership.

Gary Loveman, who lives outside of Boston, is buying a 2.4 percent minority stake in his hometown National Basketball Association team, the Celtics, according to an article in Sunday's Boston Globe.

Although the share is relatively small, the purchase was first rejected by the league's commissioner David Stern because of Loveman's job as chairman, chief executive officer and president of the casino company.

However, Loveman's application was forwarded in April to the seven-member committee that is studying Las Vegas' viability to be the home city for an NBA team.


Most Popular Stories
  • Lake Las Vegas seeks Chapter 11 protection
  • At last, Durango Station details
  • Owner of Fitz under attack
  • New-home sales hold steady in LV
  • Is any bank really safe now?
  • RECORD PAYDAY
  • MCCARRAN INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT: County approves third terminal
  • Condo buyers struggling for closure amid credit squeeze
  • DEVELOPMENT: A WHOLE LOT OF NOTHING GOING ON
  • Starbucks to close 17 LV Valley stores



  • The committee approved Loveman's application if Harrah's agreed to stop taking bets on all Celtics games at the company's sports books.

    Jacqueline Peterson, spokeswoman for Harrah's Entertainment, said the team's games have been removed from the company's sports books.

    Both the Celtics and the NBA confirmed the report was factual but declined to discuss the transaction further.

    Joel Litvin, the NBA's president of league and basketball operations, told the Globe that Loveman's bid to buy a stake in the team is considered a "slam dunk."

    The Celtics declined to discuss whether the deal would give Loveman a seat on the team's board or any kind of role in the team's operations.

    Loveman, through a spokeswoman, also declined to comment before the deal closes.

    Stern referred to Loveman's pending deal during a speech to the association's Board of Governors in New York on Oct. 25.

    "We're trying to be welcoming on the one hand and on the other we're trying to make sure that we eliminate to the greatest extent possible questions that can be raised," he said.

    Harrah's has sports books at Caesars Palace, Paris Las Vegas, Bally's, Imperial Palace, Flamingo, Harrah's and the Rio in Las Vegas.

    The company also has betting lines at Harrah's-branded casinos in Reno, Lake Tahoe and Laughlin, as well as Harveys Lake Tahoe.

    The deal will not require Harrah's to stop taking bets on any other NBA teams.

    The Palms, which is owned by the owners of the Sacramento Kings, the Maloof family, posts no NBA games.

    George Maloof, who runs the gaming property's day-to-day operations, said the NBA does not restrict him from being involved in the Kings' operations. Nevertheless, Maloof involves himself solely in the casino and not the team.

    He added that he didn't know of Loveman's move to own part of the Celtics.

    Loveman's personal investment comes at the same time as Harrah's Entertainment's joint-venture partnership with Los Angeles-based arena developer Anschutz Entertainment Group to build a $500 million arena a block off the Strip.

    The privately funded 20,000-seat arena, which is slated for 10 acres owned by Harrah's behind Bally's and Paris Las Vegas, will be built to possibly house an NBA franchise, the partners said this summer.

    The arena still needs approval from county officials, but plans are to break ground in June and open by September 2010.

    Stern has said that the league has no immediate plans to expand and there is no guarantee that Las Vegas would be first in line for an expansion franchise even with an arena.

    Loveman lives outside of Boston and taught at Harvard University Business School for four years before joining Harrah's in 1998.

    The Celtics were bought for $360 million in 2002 by an ownership group led by the long-time Grousbeck family of Massachusetts.

    Corinne Grousbeck, wife of team managing partner, governor and chief executive officer Wycliffe Grousbeck, and Loveman both sit on the board of trustees for the Children's Hospital Boston.

    Harrah's Entertainment is in the regulatory process of a $17.1 billion buyout by a joint-venture by the private equity firms Texas Pacific Group and Apollo Management.

    The deal has already received approval in a few states and is expected to go before the Nevada gaming regulators in December.

    Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or (702) 477-3893.



    Leave Your Comment 2 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Bob R wrote on November 06, 2007 04:56 PM: Another team owner with Las Vegas ties, this has to bode well for our chances of getting an NBA team. Vegas is most likely a one pro-sports franchise town, and the NBA makes the most sense--Vegas is already considered a basketball town. If UNLV can get 15,000 to a college bball game, I'm sure a pro team won't have any trouble drawing the necessary 18-19,000 fans. Harrah's isn't spending $500 mil on an arena for it to sit empty--they are going to make a big push for a pro team to occupy their building. Bottom line: Vegas will have an NBA team in the next 3 years.


    Shelley Cranley wrote on November 06, 2007 12:17 PM: I have to assume that the Celtics games being removed from the company's sports books are in the best interests of the company?