
From the Canwest News Service:
VANCOUVER -- The Vancouver Whitecaps' Major League Soccer bid is getting another high-tech hike, possibly with some high-profile spinoffs.
Sources have confirmed that Vancouver's Steve Luczo, chairman of Seagate Technology and a man who moves in interesting circles, is set to join the Whitecaps' prospective MLS ownership group.
Vancouver Whitecaps president Bob Lenarduzzi declined comment, but the announcement could come this week.
Current Whitecaps owner Greg Kerfoot welcomed San Francisco Giants part-owner Jeff Mallett and two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash - both Victoria-raised - to the fold in July.
MLS will announce its 17th and 18th franchises between late November and March.
Vancouver's up against bids from Montreal, Ottawa, Portland, Miami, Atlanta and St. Louis. There are serious players at the table, including Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank and Spanish soccer giant Barcelona, which is behind the Miami bid.
The expansion fee will be at least $40-million.
Luczo, like Mallett and Kerfoot, made his mark in Silicon Valley. Mallett is a former Yahoo chief operating officer, and Kerfoot's former company, Crystal Decisions, was once called Seagate Software. He and Luczo worked together in various capacities under the Seagate Technology umbrella. Seagate Technology is the world's largest hard-drive manufacturer and a leader in digital storage.
Don't get the idea, though, that the 51-year-old Luczo wears a pocket protector. While Kerfoot's love of soccer is well-documented - he writes cheques to the women's national team like youth teams hand out oranges at halftime - Luczo's sporting interests are more varied. And his hands are on countless hip, socially-conscious projects.
Think a techie version of Nash - Nash 2.0.
Luczo surfs, snowboards and mountain bikes. He's part of a Silicon Valley group that owns about one-third of the Boston Celtics, and he also owns a large chunk of the National Lacrosse League's San Jose Stealth.
He's a songwriter and co-founder of music company Talking House Productions, which develops San Francisco artists. His company Balance Vector brings together athletes and artists to raise awareness for various charitable events, and there's also Balance Vector Productions, which funds projects such as Made in America, a documentary on gang life in South Central L.A. that played at the Sundance Festival this year.
The film was a collaboration with Verso Entertainment, NBA star Baron Davis's production company. It was directed by Stacy Peralta (Dogtown, Z-Boys and Riding Giants) and narrated by Forest Whitaker, Best Actor Oscar winner for Last King of Scotland.
Then there's Luczo-Dragon Racing, co-owned by Luczo and Jay Penske, son of Penske Racing owner Roger. The last two Indy 500s, Luczo-Dragon Racing partnered with drivers and celebrities, including Nash, to drum up cash for charity.
Luczo and Davis are also investors in the popular social networking site ibeatyou, where people compete online with anyone at anything.
Nash is on there, throwing down a free-throw challenge and also engaging in a staring contest with the sultry Jessica Alba, whose video - yes, of her staring - has almost six million hits on YouTube.
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i dont care how many bidders they have, if they dont get that waterfront stadium they have no chance.
sorry, i meant investors, not bidders...
Yeah, what he said.
Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatchewan, Winnipeg; Two teams in Toronto, Ottawa, one or two in Montreal, Hamilton-Kitchener, London, Detroit-Windsor, even. Maybe one in the Maritimes, Halifax or whatever. Just start you own league, please, so some more of our cities can have teams. Just do it, huh?
you would want TFC to leave the league?
do you know how much money TFC is contributing? 2 yrs on and second most valueable.
revenue sharing you idiots. you all WANT tfc to stay.... it give your crappy teams more money
And your snide attitude is something we can do without. You people can't support your own league and you talk crap. And you know what? Every game for Toronto is akin to US-Mexico. Take out the anti-Americanism - a perfect example of which is your post - and a Toronto game - against, oh, Winnipeg - would be like Wheaton versus Connecticut Collge.
Can't we all just get along?
One league, two countries. Get over it!
anon 11:52 know absolutely nothing about Canada demographics, population bases, media markets, sports culture, or even Canada in general! To say that Winnipeg, Saskatchewan, Hamilton, London, Windsor, and Halifax could support pro soccer on the level of of MLS is laughable. I doubt Calgary, Edmonton, and Ottawa could do it, but I do think they'd make good USL1 markets with the right ownership.
Also, anon 11:52 wants Canadian clubs out of MLS, yet wants Detroit in a Canadian League!? Explain that one?
I also find it funny that anon 11:52 want Cdn clubs out of MLS, but is proposing a Detroit club for his Cdn league!?