You may very well be right about that, although of course the cap hit just grows with the valuation (at least in real dollar terms). But it well may be the case the franchise is already worth a lot more than they expected, so they're looking at it as a saleable asset instead of an investible one.I don't think the Yankees or Steinbrenners hurt for cash flow. They're probably content to let the asset sit and appreciate and let it sell whenever it sells. Accelerating that just accelerates the cap gain tax.
Not sure how Abu Dhabi would feel about that. They like to build.
Anyway, I'm sure the Steinbrenners aren't exactly hurting. I'm just trying to figure out why the hell they're dragging their feet on what looks like a dead-bang moneymaker to me. Why blow up the latest stadium deal over a few hundred parking spaces they're almost certainly not going to even need? The revenue looks like a pittance compared to the rest of the project.
If it wasn't an act of intentional sabotage, that's some serious nickel-and-diming. I just don't get it. Could they really be that small-bore and cheap?