Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman clarifies statements on Oakland Athletics potential relocation

Oakland Athletics logo. MLB baseball team
Oakland Athletics logo. MLB baseball team

Las Vegas mayor Carolyn Goodman is clarifying comments she made on a podcast, where she stated that the Oakland Athletics should “figure out a way to stay in Oakland” instead of relocating to Las Vegas. Goodman was under fire for comments she made on the Front Office Sports Today podcast that she had an “odd feeling” about the A’s moving to Las Vegas ever since the franchise turned down what she believed to be a better stadium location to build on in the city.

Mayor Goodman posted her statement on social media: “I want to be clear that I am excited about the prospect of Major League Baseball in Las Vegas, and it very well may be that the Las Vegas A’s will become a reality that we will welcome to our city. On Feb. 5, 2024, I was interviewed for the Front Office Sports podcast. … We discussed several topics including the Oakland A’s for about seven minutes. … My points included that it is my belief that in their perfect world, the ownership of the A’s would like to have a new ballpark on the water in Oakland and that the ownership and government there should listen to their great fans and try to make that dream come true.” Mayor Goodman ended her statement by saying that if Oakland’s dream of building a new stadium in their city were to fail, that Las Vegas “has shown that it is a spectacular market for major league sports franchises.”

On the Front Office Sports Today podcast, Goodman said she believed other sites in the area offered easier traffic situations near multiple highways and were better pieces of property for a potential stadium. Instead, the A’s ownership preferred to build a new stadium off the Las Vegas strip and chose the nine-acre Tropicana site.

Editorial credit: Macrobyte / Shutterstock.com

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