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Vancouver Whitecaps seek new ownership

Majority owner Greg Kerfoot has had an ownership stake in the team since 2002
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The Vancouver Whitecaps play games at BC Place | Chung Chow/BIV

Major League Soccer's Vancouver Whitecaps today confirmed that the team is for sale.

"This decision comes after careful consideration of the club’s journey and reflection on what is required to ensure its continued growth and success,” the team said in a news release.

Majority owner Greg Kerfoot owns the team with Steve Luczo, Jeff Mallett, and Steve Nash.

The ownership group has not revealed the exact size of each's ownership stake. 

Mallett in recent years has been executive chairman. 

He told BIV in 2020 that he and Kerfoot were the ones who approve key club decisions.

“The two Steves are not as active,” Mallett said in 2020.

He then stressed that it is Kerfoot, because of his larger ownership stake, who is the ultimate decision maker.

“We always say that we’re here to help Greg,” said Mallett, who was born and raised in B.C. and made much of his money from his time at Yahoo!, where he was one of the first dozen employees and rose to the position of president for seven years, through the dot-com boom and bust.

Kerfoot, who almost never speaks with media and is rarely photographed, founded the data-analytics software company Crystal Services in 1984. That venture later became Seagate Software and then Crystal Decisions.

He acquired the team in 2002 and then put together its current ownership group in 2008. The four were awarded an MLS franchise the following year and saw the team play in North America's premier soccer league starting in 2011.

The team said today that the Whitecaps have grown to become "a staple of MLS, reaching seventh in league attendance, doubling season ticket memberships over the past two years, and qualifying for the MLS Cup Playoffs in three of the past four seasons."

It added that the current ownership has built a solid foundation for the team and that "it is the right time for an owner with the platform, resources and ambition to enhance the club’s ability to compete at the highest levels of MLS and steward the club in realizing its significant potential."

The league confirmed the news and praised the team's owners.

“The Vancouver Whitecaps would not be where they are today without the vision and commitment of this exceptional ownership group,” said MLS commissioner Don Garber in a statement.

“The Whitecaps are a terrific club in a world-class city. On behalf of everyone at Major League Soccer, I want to thank them for their tremendous contributions and look forward to working with them to identify new ownership for the club.”

Kerfoot said today in a statement on behalf of the ownership group that it has been "committed to transforming our local soccer club into a significant contributor to our community.”

He added, "It is gratifying to see how meaningful the Whitecaps have become to so many, and to have been able to contribute to the growth of a vibrant and thriving soccer community in Vancouver, the Lower Mainland, British Columbia, and beyond.”

He thanked what he called "the passionate MLS supporters, academy development teams and players, the thousands of kids who attend camps, and the groups we support in nurturing the game in so many places have all proven out our belief in Vancouver as a first-class soccer market. The future of the Vancouver Whitecaps is bright.”

The Whitecaps launched in 1974 and played in the North American Soccer League until that league collapsed in 1984. The team this year then celebrated 50 years of professional soccer in the region. 

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