- Bob Lurie
Robert Alfred Lurie (born 1929) is a real estate magnate and former owner of the
San Francisco Giants franchise ofMajor League Baseball fromMarch 2 ,1976 untilJanuary 12 ,1993 .Giants Ownership
In 1976, Lurie led a group to buy the Giants from
Horace Stoneham for $8 million, thereby saving the team from potentially being sold to a Canadian brewery and moved toToronto . Although Toronto was awarded with its own expansion team, the Blue Jays in 1977, it would not be the last time that San Francisco'sbaseball fans would fear the possibility of losing its team.The 1970s was a generally disappointing decade for the Giants and the trend continued throughout Lurie’s ownership. In 1985, a year which saw the Giants lose 100 games (the most in franchise history), Lurie responded by hiring
Al Rosen as general manager. Under Rosen's tenure, the Giants promoted promising rookies such asWill Clark andRobby Thompson , and made canny trades to acquire such players as Kevin Mitchell,Dave Dravecky ,Candy Maldonado , andRick Reuschel . The Giants have not had a better influx of young position players since that period.Meanwhile, in both 1987 and 1989, San Francisco voters rejected two stadium referendums to replace the notoriously unaccomodating
Candlestick Park as the home of the Giants, despite the franchise's offer to pick up most of the tab for a new downtown park. Worst still, a plan to improve the existing stadium failed by an even wider margin. Frustrated, Lurie looked south towardSilicon Valley only to see San Jose and Santa Clara voters reject three more proposals to build a Giants ballpark.Finally, in October 1992, Lurie announced that he would sell the Giants, claiming that he could no longer sustain the financial losses (averaging about $2-7 million annually) that had accumulated over the last few years. During his announcement, Lurie appeared visibly emotional, his voice breaking as he explained his hopes for turning the business side around when he bought the team in 1976. Nonetheless, losing teams and poor weather conditions at Candlestick Park kept many fans away, and at the time of Lurie's announcement, the team had finished with a 72-90 record.
Originally, Lurie had agreed to sell the Giants for $115 million to an ownership group headed by
Vincent Piazza (father of baseball playerMike Piazza ) with plans to move the club to St. Petersburg,Florida . However, theNational League nixed the deal, pressuring Lurie to sell the club toBay Area investors. In an 11th hour effort to save the team from moving, a group of local investors headed by ex-Safeway magnate,Peter Magowan , offered Lurie $100 million for the Giants.Post-Giants Ownership
Since selling the Giants, Lurie has focused his efforts on his real estate firm, the Lurie Co., buying and selling properties and branching out beyond its core office holdings totalling over convert|4000000|sqft|m2, not including two hotels, a theater and a parking facility it owns. He is also involved in various philanthropic activities, which include the $20 million Louis R. Lurie Foundation.
Miscellaneous
*In June 2001, the
San Francisco Zoo proudly opened its new convert|11000|sqft|m2|sing=on Connie and Bob Lurie Education Center.*Bob Lurie was once asked about the proverbial 'complete player'. "A complete player today," Lurie remarked, "is one who can hit, field, run, throw - and pick the right agent." [Source: Glenn Liebman, Grand Slams! : The Ultimate Collection of Baseball's Best Quips, Quotes, and Cutting Remarks]
*The real estate company currently headed by Lurie was founded in 1922 by his father, Louis Lurie, a family whose name is synonymous with San Francisco real estate development during the middle part of the 20th century. The company built a number of properties along
Montgomery Street over the years, including a building Bank of America bought and tore down for its world headquarters at 555 California St., and it still owns many of them. Other notable local properties owned by Lurie are the Mark Hopkins Hotel and the Curran Theatre.*Lurie's real estate company has also upgraded some older properties in San Francisco. For example, Lurie invested $20 million in 901 Market St. and brought in retailers Copeland's Sports and Marshalls, transforming the convert|200000|sqft|m2|sing=on mid-Market Street eyesore into a winner.
ee also
San Francisco Giants External links
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A01E7DC123BF931A35753C1A962948260| Lurie for Selling Giants] — New York Times article
* [http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?section=mlb&id=2017894| San Jose mayor seeks major league team] — ESPN.com
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE5DF1138F932A35751C1A96F948260| Giants to Open Stadium Talks] — New York Times article
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE1D91331F931A15751C1A96E948260| Giants Will Stay Put] — New York Times article
* [http://sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/sf/history/index.jsp| Giants history and timeline] — Official Giants website
* [http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/execdb/showperson.php?idx=LurieBo01&fname=Bob&lname=Lurie| Bob Lurie ownership chronology] — Baseball America Executive Database
* [http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/1999/05/10/focus6.html| Bob Lurie trades Giants for new real estate lineup] — San Francisco Business Times
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.