Timberwolves sale approved as Taylor sends 20 per cent stake to Lore, Rodriguez

Former baseball player Alex Rodriguez, pictured, and e-commerce mogul Marc Lore have signed a letter of intent to buy the Timberwolves and keep the NBA franchise in Minnesota. (Lynne Sladky/AP)

MINNEAPOLIS -- The first increment of the $1.5 billion sale of the Minnesota Timberwolves to e-commerce mogul Marc Lore and retired baseball star Alex Rodriguez has been formally approved by the NBA.

The Timberwolves issued a statement Wednesday confirming the transaction and welcoming Lore and Rodriguez to the organization. The deal, which also includes the WNBA franchise Minnesota Lynx, was first reached between current owner Glen Taylor and Lore and Rodriguez this spring and was structured to begin with an initial transfer of a 20 per cent stake in the club this year.

Lore and Rodriguez will then have the right to purchase an additional 20 per share share in 2022 and an additional 40 per cent share in 2023, when they would become controlling owners of the basketball teams.

"Together with Marc and Alex, we take another step forward in building a world-class organization both on and off the court," Taylor said in the statement.

Lore expressed his excitement Wednesday in a Twitter post.

"As a middle schooler, I dreamt about owning a sports team - and today I'm so humbled to be a part of the NBA and WNBA family," Lore said.

The 80-year-old Taylor purchased the Timberwolves in 1994 for $88 million to keep them from moving to New Orleans. He told reporters when the negotiations with Lore and Rodriguez began that the franchise remaining in Minnesota was a condition of the sale.

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