The Am Law Daily
  • Home
  • The Am Law Daily
  • Litigation Daily
  • Asian Lawyer
  • Surveys & Rankings
  • Magazine
  • Lawjobs
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe

Home > Seven Am Law 200 Firms in Lineup for Sale of YES Network Stake

Font Size: increase font decrease font

Seven Am Law 200 Firms in Lineup for Sale of YES Network Stake

By Brian Baxter Contact All Articles 

The Am Law Daily

November 20, 2012

  •    
  •    
  •    
  •      
 

Lawyers from seven Am Law 200 firms have grabbed roles on News Corporation's acquisition of a 49 percent stake in the YES Network that reportedly values the regional sports channel at roughly $3 billion.

While Rupert Murdoch's media empire did not disclose how much it is paying to acquire nearly half of YES, the price tag was put at roughly $1.5 billion by The New York Times, which broke the news last week that the network was mulling a deal with News Corp., the world's second-largest media conglomerate. As part of the deal, News Corp. has an option to increase its stake in YES, which broadcasts New York Yankees and Brooklyn Nets games, to 80 percent after three years.

The Times also reported this week that News Corp. is once again in acquisition mode after putting an embarrassing phone-hacking scandal behind it in the U.K. As it happens, the YES deal was announced the same day that two former executives of News Corp.'s British newspaper unit were hit with bribery charges as part of a parallel investigation into phone-hacking.

News Corp. has incurred an estimated $200 million in legal bills and employed more than a few outside lawyers in its quest to combat the legal fallout from phone-hacking abroad, according to our previous reports. But the number of attorneys working on the YES deal, known internally as "Project Homer," could fill out more than a few lineup cards.

A 30-lawyer team advised various parties on the YES side of the transaction, according to Yankees COO Lonn Trost, who has been with the team since 1997. Prior to joining the Yankees, Trost was a partner at Herrick, Feinstein, a firm he joined in the early 1990s after leaving New York's Shea & Gould, where he headed the now-defunct firm's sports practice.

Trost says Yankees president Randy Levine, who is also senior counsel with Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld in New York, played a major role in the negotiations with News Corp. Alan Chang serves as deputy general counsel and vice president of legal affairs for the Yankees, the storied Major League Baseball franchise that formed YES in June 2001 and had resisted selling a major stake in the sports channel until now.

New York–based YES, which stands for the Yankees Entertainment & Sports Network, launched in 2002 as the official home of the Yankees and National Basketball Association's Nets, who at the time played in New Jersey. The network and its other investors—including former Nets owner Raymond Chambers and Goldman Sachs—endured a fierce fight with Cablevision that eventually ended with a settlement in 2003 allowing the station to broadcast sporting events to millions of additional subscribers in the tri-state area.

Since then, the value of sports programming has skyrocketed, and YES is now considered the most valuable regional sports network in the country, according to Forbes. Richard Birns, a corporate partner at Boies, Schiller & Flexner, is leading a team from the firm representing YES on the News Corp. deal that includes corporate partners Mike Huang and Jason Hill and tax head Mike Kosnitzky.

While Boies Schiller has long advised the Yankees as a team—founding partner and legendary litigator David Boies famously left Cravath, Swaine & Moore in 1997 because of a conflict involving his representation of the franchise and Time Warner—the firm has also handled corporate and litigation work for YES since its inception in 2001, including the settlement with Cablevision. (Boies Schiller touts the settlement on its website, noting that it "won an arbitral award on behalf of YES" that resulted in a "long-term carriage agreement with Cablevision that substantially increased the enterprise value of YES.")

Advising the Yankees and their holding company Yankees Global Enterprises on the deal with News Corp. is Trost's former firm, Herrick, which is fielding a team of lawyers led by chairman of the executive committee and corporate practice cochair Irwin Kishner, corporate cochair Edward Stevenson, and corporate partners Richard Morris and Daniel Etna. Like Boies Schiller, Herrick is a longtime legal adviser to the Yankees, having handled both litigation and stadium finance work for the team.

A browser or device that allows javascript is required to view this content.

Continue reading

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Next



Subscribe to The Am Law Daily

You must be signed in to comment on an article

Find similar content

Firms mentioned

    
  • Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
  • Boies, Schiller & Flexner
  • Cravath, Swaine & Moore
  • Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
  • Herrick, Feinstein
  • Hogan Lovells
  • Jenner & Block
  • Shea & Gould
  • Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
  • Weil, Gotshal & Manges
  • Williams & Connolly

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • YES Network
  • Brooklyn Nets
  • Star Wars
  • Blackboard
  • Yankeesnets
  • NJ Holdings
  • Legal Week
  • Lucasfilm Inc.
  • Shine Group
  • Squadron Ellenoff Plesent & Sheinfeld
  • Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
  • Providence Equity Partners
  • Weil, Gotshal & Manges M&A
  • Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom M&A
  • Cravath Swaine & Moore
  • Yankees and National Basketball Association
  • ESPN Inc.
  • Bloomberg LP
  • Cablevision Systems Corporation
  • Major League Baseball
  • The Times
  • New York Yankees
  • General Electric Company
  • Jenner & Block LLC
  • Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Time Warner Inc.
  • The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
  • New York Times Company
  • The Walt Disney Company
  • News Corporation

Key categories

    
  • In-House Counsel and Corporate Law Departments
  • Law Firm Profitability
  • Mergers and Acquisitions

Most viewed stories

    
  1. Judge Vacates Ropes Client's Double Murder Conviction
    •      
  2. Ugliness Inside The Am Law 100, Part II
    •      
  3. Survey: Firm Leaders Admit Downturn's Permanent Impact
    •      
  4. Perkins Coie's Double Identity
    •      
  5. Citi Survey: Firm Leaders' Confidence Off as 2013 Begins
    •      
lawjobs.com

TOP JOBS

MORE JOBS

POST A JOB

From the Law.com Network

The General Counsel and the Compensation Committee

Your Company's Been Hacked -- What Comes Next?

Simpson Helps Yahoo, Tumblr Connect for $1 Billion Deal

Kasowitz Benson Launches in Los Angeles

Contrite Companies Can Win Forgiveness in Bribery Cases
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Plaintiffs Want to See Toyota's 'Crown Jewels'
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Collaboration Is Key to Defending Cyberattacks

Stanford Law Builds on Role as Legal Tech Incubator

Prolific ADA Plaintiff Faces Nemesis in Harassment Suit

Ullyot Exit Closes Chapter for Facebook

Fla. Attorneys Lead Force-Placed Insurance Fight

Lawsuit Names Missing Fla. Attorney for Alleged Fraud
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Circuit Voids $3 Million Judgment Against Girls Gone Wild Producer

Judge Says Boston Bombings Had No Effect on Terrorist Sentences
  •      
    • Subscription Required

The Affordable State-Specific Practice Solution
Available in NY, NJ, PA and CT editions - research, draft and prepare even the most complex cases with ease.

Court System, Counties Agree on 3 Court Facility Upgrades

Guardian Who Delayed Final Account Must Pay Referee Fee
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Lawsuit Testing Federal Porn Regulation to Proceed

Ex-Quarterback Can Press Claim Over EA's Video Game
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Law Schools Are Looking Beyond LSATs, Says Mich. Dean

Is Freezing Your Eggs the Solution?

Advising Clients on Weather and the Workplace
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Texas Sues BP, Transocean, Halliburton, Anadarko Entities
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Insurer Beats Bid By Bilked Client
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Barnes Asks For Court-Appointed Lawyer To Help Defend Brooks

Corporate Bribery Case Part Of National Trend
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Court Continues To Grant Lawyers Fraud Immunity
  •      
    • Subscription Required

About The American Lawyer | Hall of Fame | Bookstore | Top Rated Lawyers® | Subscribe | Contact Us | Site Map

  • About |
  • ALM Properties |
  • ALM Reprints |
  • Customer Support |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • Terms & Conditions |
  • ALM User License Agreement
ALM Media