Explained: F1’s billion-dollar value as ‘most valuable sports empire’

Explained: F1’s billion-dollar value as ‘most valuable sports empire’

 

 

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Liberty Media, who own F1, are valued at $21 billion (£16.8bn), pricier than the ownership groups that Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester United belong to.F1 itself is valued at $17.1 billion (£13.8bn).Forbes’ top 10 most valuable sports empires1: Liberty Media (Formula 1, Atlanta Braves, Drone Racing League, Meyer Shank Racing) – $20.8bn2: Kroenke Sports & Entertainment (Arsenal FC, Denver Nuggets, Colorado Rapids) – $12.75bn3: Jerry Jones (Dallas Cowboys, The Star) – $11.32bn4: Fenway Sports Group (Liverpool FC, Boston Red Sox, Pittsburgh Penguins) – $10.4bn5: Madison Square Garden Sports (New York Knicks, New York Rangers) – $9.17bn6: The Kraft Group (New England Patriots, New England Revolution, UFC) – $7.94bn7: Yankee Global Enterprises (New York Yankees) – $7.64bn8: Glazer Family (Manchester United, Tampa Bay Buccaneers) – $7.53bn9: Paul G. Allen Trust (Seattle Seahawks, Portland Trail Blazers) – $7.41bn10: Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (Toronto Raptors, Toronto Maple Leafs, Toronto FC) – $6.42bnExplained: New rules for F1 2023 seasonVideo of Explained: New rules for F1 2023 seasonForbes wrote: “Liberty Media’s sports empire, worth $21 billion, sits on top. Headed by billionaire John Malone, Liberty’s primary sports assets are the Formula One auto-racing circuit (enterprise value: $17.1 billion) and the Atlanta Braves MLB team ($2.1 billion). “Formula One had a banner 2022, averaging 1.21 million viewers across the ESPN family of networks, the highest on record for the series, and signed a new television deal in June reportedly worth at least $75 million a year, 15 times its previous deal. “No wonder Saudi Arabia’s Sovereign Wealth Fund considered acquiring Formula One for $20 billion last year, according to Bloomberg.”Related Bottas hits out at the FIA for wanting to “control” F1 drivers  Hamilton’s rare insight into “psychological battle” with his F1 adversariesThe reported bid from Saudi Arabia has caused a stir in F1.Mohammed Ben Sulayem, the FIA president, has been criticised by F1 for involving himself in the matter in a series of tweets.Ben Sulayem is also at the centre of a controversy to potentially allow new teams into F1 for 2026.Separately, The Times reported that the FIA president made sexist remarks on an old, personal website.Revealed: Max Verstappen’s luxury lifestyle – cars, planes, and games! 

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