CLEVELAND -
Associated Press
CLEVELAND (AP) - Browns
owner Randy Lerner has begun talks with truck-stop magnate Jimmy Haslam
on giving up controlling interest while committing to keep the team in
Cleveland, the club president said Friday.
And get this: Haslam is a self-described "1,000 percent" Pittsburgh Steelers fan.
"(Lerner) is giving up
controlling interest in the team," president Mike Holmgren said at the
team's suburban Berea training camp. Holmgren said he and Lerner have
discussed the matter throughout the summer.
Holmgren said the talks on the future of the team included the agreed stipulation that the Browns would remain in town.
"The Cleveland Browns are not going anywhere," Holmgren said.
Holmgren said that Lerner's
interests have changed during the years and that the owner had told him
a while back that, while he loved the team, he would consider selling
if and when a reliable buyer came along. "All the stars aligned in the
last few months," Holmgren said.
Lerner disclosed the talks in a statement earlier Friday.
"In connection with current
rumors and press inquiries, I can report that I've been approached by
Mr. Jimmy Haslam, who is interested in making an investment in the
Cleveland Browns. We are currently in negotiations and both sides have
agreed to keep that dialogue and its details private," Lerner said in a
statement.
"Given that any transaction
would require League approval, care has been taken so that this process
will not be disruptive to the organization, in particular the football
team, as it prepares for the upcoming season. We will share further
details or make an announcement if it becomes necessary."
The Browns have been owned
by the Lerner family since 1999, when the franchise was reborn after the
original club moved to Baltimore.
Randy Lerner, 50, who also
owns the Aston Villa soccer club in England, inherited the Browns in
2002 following the death of his father, Al.
Some fans have been unhappy
with Randy Lerner, long criticizing him as a disengaged owner of a club
that has made the playoffs just once since it was recreated.
Jimmy Haslam is president
and CEO of Knoxville, Tenn.-based Pilot Flying J, the largest operator
of travel centers and travel plazas in North America with more than 550
retail locations. He is the older brother of Tennessee's Gov. Bill
Haslam, who also worked for the family business before he was elected
mayor of Knoxville in 2003 and again in 2007, then governor in 2010.
Lauren Christ, spokeswoman
for the company, confirmed that Jimmy Haslam was the prospective Browns
investor. She said Haslam would have no further comment on the Browns
statement and referred all questions to the team.
Phil Dawson, the only
player remaining from the 1999 expansion Browns, said the announcement
surprised him but it doesn't affect his job.
"I certainly didn't come
here this morning thinking this would happen," the 37-year-old kicker
said. "It is not going to affect the team. We come out to play."
Coach Pat Shurmur said his
primary concern was for the coaching staff he hired and then the players
and trainers. Shurmur said he will not address sale negotiations and
will continue to talk about football.
NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league is aware of the discussions.
Haslam has been a minority
investor in the Pittsburgh Steelers and in a 2010 profile told the
team's Steelers.com Web site that he had been a Dallas Cowboys and then
an Indianapolis Colts fan. But with the Pittsburgh investment, Haslam
said he had become "1,000 percent a Steelers fan." The Steelers, of
course, are the Browns' chief rival.
The Haslam brothers are
supporters of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where their
father Jim Haslam played tackle on the 1951 national championship
football team under Gen. Robert R. Neyland, who is credited with
building the school into a football powerhouse.
The elder Haslam founded the Pilot Corp. in 1958 with a single gas station in Gate City, Va.
He credits sons Bill and
Jimmy with expanding the chain from mostly gas stations and convenience
stores to a "travel center" concept of truck stops featuring branded
fast food service.
Jim Haslam told The
Associated Press in 2010 that his approach for his sons was: "Jimmy, you
take care of today, and Bill you take care of tomorrow."
"When we started our big
expansion in the mid-1980s, Jimmy kind of ran the operations and Bill
did the development fund and the new locations - all the long-range
stuff," he said.
Jim Haslam was a longtime
member of the University of Tennessee Board of Trustees and in 2006
donated $32.5 million to the school, the largest gift ever at the time.
He also established the
Haslam Family Foundation for charitable giving. Bill Haslam and Jimmy
Haslam each gave $30.5 million to the foundation between 2001 and 2010.
The brothers' biggest annual donation was $10 million each in 2008 and
2009, according to IRS reports.
Over the same 10-year
period, the family foundation gave $19 million, with the University of
Tennessee, the UT Foundation and United Way receiving the most.
Cleveland Mayor Frank
Jackson sought to deflect any talk of the city losing the Browns again.
Then-owner Art Modell moved the franchise to Baltimore in 1996.
"The 30-year lease to the Cleveland Browns commenced in 1999 and continues to 2029," Jackson's office said in a statement.
"This lease, like the prior
Municipal Stadium lease for which the City of Cleveland successfully
obtained an injunction in 1995, requires the Browns to play all their
regular season and playoff home games in the Cleveland Browns Stadium.
If this requirement is not honored the city has legal options that could
be pursued if necessary."