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    José E. Feliciano Ushers in the LinkedIn-ification of the San Diego Padres

    Along with his wife Kwanza Jones, the billionaire and Chelsea FC co-owner is purchasing the Padres for an MLB-record $3.9 billion. Who is he, and what will his ownership mean for the club and its fans?

    Brendan Dentino
    Image courtesy of Gregory Bull/Associated Press

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    José E. Feliciano, the San Diego Padres’ next owner, isn’t an AI-generated billionaire. He only sounds like one. 

    “As I recently discussed at Bloomberg Invest, this inflection point will generate significant investment opportunities for disciplined investors…” read a recent LinkedIn post.

    “The power grid is the backbone of the modern economy, and it’s about to undergo its most significant transformation yet,” declared another. “I studied at Princeton U to be a power engineer [sic] so this is a full circle moment for me!”

    Indeed, Feliciano’s LinkedIn profile, which is as exquisitely maintained and expertly pruned as a French garden, goes back that far. Princeton, ‘94. Stanford Business School, ‘99. “Did he cut his teeth as a financial analyst at a big investment firm?” you wonder. Of course: Goldman Sachs, 1994-97. “Then where did he make partner?” That would be at Tennenbaum Capital Partners, 2001-05. “Mere employees don’t make billions, though. How did he earn his fortune?” He co-founded Clearlake Capital Group, 2006. The Santa Monica-based Clearlake Capital is now a $90 billion, private equity behemoth.

    For their part, Feliciano and his wife Kwanza Jones are now worth an estimated $4 billion. But don’t worry. He found time through the years for five volunteer positions and to serve on the board at some 33 organizations. “Chairman, San Diego Padres” will soon be the next entry on his LinkedIn, after the reported $3.9 billion purchase from the Seidler family is approved by MLB owners. The organization on José’s résumé that would interest Padres fans the most is England’s Chelsea Football Club.

    In 2022, a consortium led by Clearlake Capital purchased the legendary club for an astounding $5.24 billion. The good: That amount didn’t stop Feliciano as “Co-Controlling Owner” from shoveling cash into Chelsea’s furnace. According to the BBC, the club under Clearlake’s leadership has spent no less than $2 billion on player acquisitions. The bad: That spending has resulted in the club winning only the 2024-25 Conference League and the 2025 Club World Cup, which, to elite European clubs, are two trophies that barely matter. And the ugly: Feliciano sounded like an unedited ChatGPT response when asked at a conference “Was this harder than you anticipated, owning a football club?”

    Within the six minutes of private equity gobbledygook—and sandwiched between complaints about scrutiny from sports media—Feliciano said something that should make Padres fans’ ears perk up: “The best way to make our club more valuable is to win.”

    Now, Chelsea operates in a uniquely challenging business environment in that the club competes for players in an international market, one that doesn’t offer the same economizing advantages of the U.S. market, and the efficiencies in a fluid game like soccer are... well, you get the idea. That point is Feliciano knows how to turn a profit. One does not become a multi-billionaire and a sports power broker without ruthlessly wringing out every cent from every Excel spreadsheet. But he also seems to respect the spiritual connection between club and supporter (or, perhaps, product and customer).  “Earning the trust and confidence of our supporters—Please know that everyone at the club is relentlessly focused on delivering that,” Feliciano wrote last summer on LinkedIn about his Chelsea Lions.

    As of this writing, Feliciano and Jones have yet to release a statement about their buying the Padres, but it’s doubtless that José is relishing the opportunity to buy into Major League Baseball’s legal monopoly. In the Premier League, Chelsea is subject to relegation, and the club must compete (i.e. spend) and constantly improve in all aspects of their operation to maintain their place in the world’s most watched football league. They also have to compete for fans in their own city. London has seven teams in the Premier League this season. 

    None of that is a concern in the States. The Padres own the San Diego market in perpetuity, and no matter how bad the Padres are, they will remain in the world's most watched baseball league. Chelsea is bigger. The Padres are safer. 

    To be sure, Feliciano is bringing more to San Diego than mere business acumen. They are major philanthropists. The Kwanza Jones & José E. Feliciano Initiative has committed $250 million to various charitable efforts, and they contributed the largest gift by Black and Latino donors in Princeton University history. And both are only in their 50s. Padres fans are getting young, dynamic owners that could change not just the team but also the region for decades to come.

    The Padres, long a small-market minnow, will soon be, above all, a major private equity asset. Is that a good thing? It remains to seen—no one posts about their flaws or failures on LinkedIn.

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