Former Miami Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria thinks Derek Jeter was a fantastic shortshop, but his time as the team’s CEO and co-owner had some big mistakes. In his new book, "From the Front Row: ...
Ever had one of those unwanted relatives that moved in, began raiding your fridge, and always seemed to have unwanted baggage with them? The kind that made the black sheep of the family look good? The ...
The tale of Jeff Loria's ownership of the Marlins: From $30 million to $1.6 billion. Jeffrey Loria, an art dealer who owns the Miami Marlins, is close to scoring one of the biggest windfalls in the ...
Over the past 18 years, as Jeffrey Loria sprayed the stench of his naked greed across baseball like the skunk he is, as he destroyed the sport in one city and bilked another out of billions of dollars ...
Jeffrey Loria throws a lot of chin music in his new book, From the Front Row: Reflections of a Major League Baseball Owner and Modern Art Dealer. The former managing general partner of the Expos ...
Jeffrey Loria won't read this -- he clearly doesn't care what people think of him. But he has billions of dollars, so what does it matter? In a move that comes as a surprise to no one except for, ...
Out of the public eye for six years, former Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria has resurfaced, promoting his new book, “From the Front Row: Reflections of a Major League Baseball Owner and Modern Art Dealer.
Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria is unpopular among pretty much everyone who pays attention to baseball. He helped kill baseball in Montreal and now has Miami-area taxpayers on the hook for millions and ...
In a game so often described as one of failure, in a game that promises to be one of meritocracy, there is one job immune to both: the owner's. That much was made clear by news Friday that Jeffrey ...
Jeffrey Loria, the former owner of the Miami Marlins, has agreed to pay $4.2 million in a lawsuit settlement, according to the Associated Press (h/t ESPN). Per that report, the payment of $3.637 ...
Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald reported Friday that Loria agreed to sell the Marlins for $1.2 billion, with Sherman serving as the "control person" and Jeter running "the business and baseball ...