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Sunday, June 18 | |||||
Giants claim rights to Silicon Valley | |||||
OAKLAND, Calif. -- The San Francisco Giants say they have
exclusive rights to the Silicon Valley market and they're not about
to let the cross-bay Oakland Athletics move there.
The A's have presented major league baseball with a preliminary
proposal to move the team to Santa Clara. Team owners want
tentative approval from commissioner Bud Selig before working
further with a group that wants to build a privately financed
stadium near Great America amusement park.
The team's lease at Network Associates Coliseum in Oakland
expires after next season.
"It's not a formal bid, not a formal document," A's spokesman
Jim Young said about the team's communication with Selig's office.
"What they have in front of them are some very preliminary facts.
I would categorize these as just being preliminary discussions."
Giants owner Peter Magowan said his team would oppose any
attempt by the A's to move.
"I'd be very surprised if major league baseball didn't defend
our territorial rights," he said. "Bud Selig has gone on the
record as saying he supports the Giants' territorial rights, and
according to information that I have, the A's know that."
Larry Stone, a member of the Santa Clara Stadium Association,
said the Giants' new downtown San Francisco ballpark changes the
situation. Pacific Bell Park opened this season.
"The reason the territorial rights were created was to move the
Giants to Santa Clara County," said Stone, the county tax
assessor. "That reason no longer exists."
The Giants, who have territorial rights to San Francisco and San
Mateo Counties, received rights to Santa Clara County in the early
1990s when there was discussion about moving the team.
Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown said it's no secret the A's have
wanted a baseball-only stadium. The A's currently share the
Coliseum with the Oakland Raiders football team.
But Brown added that the A's are having a great season and "if
the fans turn out, the team will be here for years to come."
Young said the team has been clear about wanting to stay in the
San Francisco Bay area, which includes Santa Clara. And staying in
Oakland remains an option.
"One Oakland city official is on record saying the city should
explore a baseball-only facility in Oakland," Young said. "We
would welcome talks along those lines."
A's players, meanwhile, weren't concerned with the
behind-the-scenes maneuvering. The A's were in first place in the
American League West on Saturday, a game up on the Seattle
Mariners.
"It's not as if it would be a huge blow for Oakland if we move
30 minutes down the road," outfielder Matt Stairs told The Oakland
Tribune. "One, it would be a better stadium. Two, it would be in a
better area and, three, maybe something good would come out of it.
Maybe that's the way to reward all the fans from Oakland, to give
them a better place to watch a game."
| ALSO SEE Sunday in the NFL? Athletics pour it on Royals 21-3 Report: A's propose a move to Santa Clara |