NFL’s Browns plan to leave Cleveland stadium for dome in the suburbs

NFL’s Browns plan to leave Cleveland stadium for dome in the suburbs


A general view of Huntington Bank Field during an NFL football game between the Cleveland Browns and the New York Giants in Cleveland on Sept. 22, 2024.

Kirk Irwin | AP

The National Football League’s Cleveland Browns are leaving the shores of Lake Erie.

The Browns plan to leave their current open-air stadium in the city of Cleveland for a yet-to-be-built domed stadium in Brook Park, Ohio, according to a press release from Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb that was later confirmed by the Browns owners.

Jimmy and Dee Haslam, the principals of the ownership group that owns the Browns, notified Bibb of their plan to move on Wednesday night, according to Bibb. He announced the news in a scathing Thursday press release in which he called the Haslams’ choice “driven by a desire to maximize profits rather than positive impact.”

“They had the opportunity to reinvest in Cleveland, transform the current stadium into a world-class facility, enhance the fan experience, and remain highly profitable,” Bibb said. “We put those options on the table in good faith. Unfortunately, that was not enough.”

In a joint statement, the Haslams said it was essential that the team had a domed stadium for “year-round activity,” and the economics of building a dome on some designated land that was still on the lake in the city of Cleveland did not make sense.

A stadium’s ability to generate income from non-football events has gotten even more attention lately. One NFL stadium netted $4 million in revenue per show during Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in 2023, CNBC earlier reported.

The Brook Park dome will not use existing taxpayer dollars, the release said.

“Instead, the over $2 billion private investment, together with the public investment, will create a major economic development project that will drive the activity necessary to pay the public bond debt service through future project-generated and Browns-generated revenue,” the Haslams said in the release, while also emphasizing they were still committed to bettering the city of Cleveland.

The Browns’ departure will cost the city of Cleveland $30 million per year in economic impact, according to the mayor’s release. The city is still open to resuming negotiations if the Brook Park venue does not work out, Bibb said.

The City of Cleveland and Haslam Sports Group have been negotiating about renovating the existing stadium or potentially building a new one in Cleveland. But the Haslam Sports Group had also been considering a $2.4 billion dome in Brook Park, according to the Associated Press, and intends to go with that option.

Brook Park is just more than 16 miles from the Browns’ current stadium, which was built in 1999.

The Browns are valued at $6.02 billion, according to CNBC’s Official 2024 NFL Team Valuations. The Browns recently reached a naming rights agreement with Huntington National Bank for their current stadium.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO



Source

Nike co-founder Phil Knight to donate  billion to University of Oregon’s Cancer Institute
Business

Nike co-founder Phil Knight to donate $2 billion to University of Oregon’s Cancer Institute

Phil Knight Matthew Staver | Bloomberg | Getty Images Nike co-founder Phil Knight is donating $2 billion to the Oregon Health and Science University’s Cancer Institute, the single largest donation ever to a U.S. university, college or health institution, according to the Knight Foundation. The foundation said on Thursday the gift that will be used […]

Read More
Tapestry shares plunge 15% as Coach parent says tariffs will bite into profits
Business

Tapestry shares plunge 15% as Coach parent says tariffs will bite into profits

People walk past a Coach store on Madison Avenue in New York. Carlo Allegri | Reuters Shares of Coach and Kate Spade parent Tapestry plunged Thursday after the company said tariffs will bite into its profits even as sales grow. The handbag, shoe and accessory maker said costs from higher duties will total $160 million […]

Read More
John Deere forecasts 0 million in tariff impacts this year
Business

John Deere forecasts $600 million in tariff impacts this year

The John Deere logo is displayed as attendees view a 5105M utility tractor at the Deere & Co. booth during the World Ag Expo at the International Agri-Center in Tulare, California on February 11, 2025. Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images John Deere is warning that tariff costs for the agricultural machinery company […]

Read More