In the summer of 2010, while most of the NBA’s attention was focused on new Miami Heat forward LeBron James, cable baron Chris Cohan quietly sold the Golden State Warriors to Mandalay Entertainment for $450 million.
Fifteen years later, the verdict is in: sound investment.
A Sportico list Wednesday valued the Warriors at a staggering $9.1 billion, making the once-snakebitten franchise the second-most valuable sports team in the world—behind only the Dallas Cowboys, who were valued at $10.3 billion.
Spurred by the career of future Hall of Fame guard Stephen Curry, Golden State has won four championships in the last 11 years. Riding Silicon Valley’s 2010s boom years, the Warriors opened a shiny new arena, San Francisco’s Chase Center in 2020, further increasing their value.
The New York Knicks, Los Angeles Lakers and New York Yankees rounded out the top five, while spots six through 10 were all occupied by big-market NFL teams—the Los Angeles Rams, New York Giants, New England Patriots, San Francisco 49ers and New York Jets.
Dave Williams  | Capitol Beat News ServiceSupporters of legalizing gambling in Georgia may have to wait until next year for the General Assembly to act.With
Josef Newgarden, Josh Berry visit their middle school in HendersonvilleJosef Newgarden and Josh Berry visit Ellis Middle School Hendersonville. They were classm
MW Athletix --Eastvale Native and NFL Safety Marcus Williams brings professional-level training to young athletes with same champion-building team heâ€
Recruiting for Michigan football in 2026 has been in something of a holding pattern as the Wolverines wait until the bulk of spring and summer visits come about