"In new court documents filed late Thursday, attorneys for the Rose Bowl Operating Co. and the City of Pasadena contended that "upon information and belief," in late 2024 or early 2025, Kroenke Sports & Entertainment executives openly suggested that SoFi Stadium was pursuing UCLA, "demonstrating the SoFi defendants' intent to induce UCLA's breach and disturb UCLA's performance of the agreement" from a contract that binds the Bruins to play at the Rose Bowl through the 2043 season."
"The plaintiffs attorneys further alleged that the SoFi Stadium defendants knew about UCLA's agreement with the Rose Bowl "yet coordinated with UCLA to breach its contractual obligations and abandon the Rose Bowl stadium in favor of playing its home football games at SoFi Stadium." The plaintiffs attorneys contended that SoFi Stadium officials were aware that such discussions would violate the school's agreement with the Rose Bowl, "thereby acting with malice in luring UCLA football away from its contractual home in Pasadena.""
"Furthermore, the plaintiffs contended in their allegations that "as a direct and proximate cause of the SoFi defendants' conduct, and as described herein, plaintiffs have suffered irreparable harm necessitating equitable relief and for which monetary damages alone would be inadequate. Plaintiffs have also incurred significant monetary damages, including economic loss, consequential damages, and other general and specific damages, in an amount to be determined at trial, but which amount could exceed one billion dollars.""
Rose Bowl Operating Co. and the City of Pasadena filed an amended complaint adding Kroenke Sports & Entertainment and SoFi Stadium as defendants to keep UCLA's football team at the Rose Bowl. The complaint alleges that Kroenke executives openly suggested SoFi Stadium pursued UCLA in late 2024 or early 2025, demonstrating intent to induce UCLA's breach of its agreement to play at the Rose Bowl through the 2043 season. The complaint alleges SoFi defendants coordinated with UCLA to breach contractual obligations and lured the team away, acting with malice. Plaintiffs claim irreparable harm and monetary damages possibly exceeding one billion dollars.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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