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Texas,
United States
News
Casino
And Sports Connection
Las Vegas and Texas connection
Miriam
Adelson buys $2 billion stake in NBA Dallas Mavericks
Las
Vegas Sands casino controlling shareholder Miriam
Adelson is reportedly selling a $2 billion stake in
the company to buy the Dallas Mavericks NBA franchise,
according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
"We
have been advised by the selling stockholders that
they currently intend to use the net proceeds from
this offering, along with additional cash on hand,
to fund the purchase of a majority interest in a professional
sports franchise pursuant to a binding purchase agreement,
subject to customary league approvals," the Sands
said in the filing.
While
the SEC filing did not name the Mavericks as the purchase
target, Sportico reported the Adelson family was buying
a majority stake in the team but that owner Mark Cuban
would continue to retain operational control of it.
The Dallas Morning News also reported the story.
The
stock sale will reduce Adelson's stake in the casino
company by 4%. Miriam Adelson is the widow Las Vegas
Sands founder Sheldon Adelson who died in 2021. She
has had no corporate involvement in the company but
her son-in-law Patrick Dumont is president of the
Sands and a member of the company's board of directors.
Adelson,
78, is the widow of Sheldon Adelson, the founder of
Las Vegas Sands who died in 2021. She has no role
with the corporate side of the company, but through
a trust and her personal shares, she controls 56.4%
of the Sands. Miriam Adelson is ranked at No. 24 on
the Forbes 400 with a net worth of $32.3 billion.
She
has cut back on her husband's political donations.
When he was alive, Sheldon Adelson was among the GOP's
largest donors, although Miriam Adelson has met with
presidential hopeful Nikki Haley and former President
Donald Trump, the front runner in next year's election.
Las
Vegas, long considered a prime market for professional
sports, has added a handful of teams and high profile
events to the city in recent years. Formula One has
added a stop in Las Vegas to its Grand Prix race tour.
Major
League Baseball recently approved the relocation of
the Oakland Athletics to a $1.5 billion stadium planned
for the Strip that is scheduled to open in 2028 following
in the footsteps of their pro football counterparts
and stadium mates.
The
Raiders moved from Oakland to Las Vegas for the 2020
NFL season, which led the NFL to award Super Bowl
LVIII to Allegiant Stadium in February. With the A's
move, Oakland County Coliseum, long a central focus
of competitive professional sports in its heyday,
will now sit empty.
The
Vegas Golden Knights, an expansion team in the National
Hockey League, began play at T-Mobile Arena in 2017.
The
Adelson family had a hand in bringing the Raiders
to Las Vegas, but Sheldon Adelson, who had committed
$650 million to help build Allegiant Stadium, pulled
his funding after the state Legislature passed a $750
million measure tied to a hotel tax on the Strip.
The
NBA has been widely thought to be considering expanding
to Las Vegas. Oak View Group CEO Tim Leiweke is planning
a 20,000 seat arena built to NBA specifications, part
of a $10 billion resort and entertainment complex
on land leased to him by the son of the Sands Chairman
and CEO.
News
Texas
town drops 'Bikinis' name - 28th June 2015

Bikinis,
Texas, is no more.
The
privately owned town has reverted to Bankersmith,
the name it had before it was bought by a restaurateur
whose chain requires waitresses to wear bikinis.
Doug
Guller bought the ghost town in 2012 with the intention
of making it a tourist attraction tied to the restaurant
chain.
Since
acquiring the property, Guller has built a hall with
a bar and sound and light system for weddings and
corporate events.
The
Austin American-Statesman reports that the name change
is meant to appease neighbours, who have complained
about rowdiness at events.
Guller
says the property can hold about 3,000 people.
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