A’s president Dave Kaval met with Oakland city and Alameda County officials at the A’s executive offices in Jack London Square on Thursday morning to discuss a possible lease extension for the team at the Coliseum.
In a 45-minute meeting that was described as positive and informal by those in attendance, everything was put on the table to facilitate discussions about an extension that would keep the A’s in Oakland until their proposed ballpark in Las Vegas is ready, no sooner than 2028.
It’s the first time the A’s have gotten together with local officials to discuss an extension, according to Alameda County Supervisor David Haubert. Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao’s chief of staff Leigh Hanson and City Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan were also among those in attendance.
“It’s a recognition that we all have to work together, we’re all in the same boat to some degree,” Haubert said. “The fact that we had a dialogue, had a positive dialogue, is a good thing. There were no food fights. No backstabbing. No yelling at each other. It’s professional dialogue.”
The A’s have also met in recent weeks with city officials in Salt Lake City and Sacramento about playing in Triple-A ballparks that seat 15,400 and 14,000, respectively.
They expect to continue having conversations with representatives from Oakland in the coming weeks, with the hope of reaching a resolution soon, before MLB releases its schedule for 2025 in the summer.
“We had a positive meeting with the city and county,” said an A’s spokesperson familiar with Thursday’s meeting. “We look forward to further discussions regarding a lease extension at the Coliseum for the interim period before the Vegas ballpark opens.”
The big question is what Oakland would want in return, and if the A’s are able to give it to them.
Mayor Thao said last September that she would want “some tangibles for our city.” Among those discussed again on Thursday were the idea of the A’s name and logo being kept in Oakland, the guarantee of an MLB expansion team coming to Oakland and a guarantee that the Oakland Roots and/or Oakland Soul soccer teams could play games at the Coliseum.
But many of those factors would involve cooperation from additional parties, such as Major League Baseball. MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has already said that he isn’t in position to guarantee an expansion team to any city, since MLB hasn’t formally decided on expansion yet and doesn’t plan to do so until the A’s and Tampa Bay Rays are in new stadiums.
Manfred has also said the matters of the name and logo are up to A’s owner John Fisher, who would present a recommendation to MLB clubs.
Both Fisher and Manfred have expressed concern about the viability of the 58-year-old Coliseum, with Manfred saying in November that “at some point a facility deteriorates to the level it’s just not a major league facility.”
Prior to Thursday, the A’s had already been engaging in discussions with city officials about an extension to their lease, but Haubert said he didn’t feel as though all sides were talking openly.
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He organized Thursday’s meeting because “it was in the best interest of the community and everybody if they did talk.”
“Getting together was a good thing,” he said. “As I expected, it was good to let everyone express their thoughts on the situation, their interests moving forward together. We all know the deals, the details of the situations that the A’s are about to own half of the facility in connection with the City of Oakland. We have to work together.”
Everything was put on the table and nothing was taken off the table, Haubert said.
Neither Hanson nor Kaplan immediately responded to requests for comment on Thursday’s meeting.
The sides will meet again in the coming weeks.