Warriors are more valuable than Lakers, Dodgers or Yankees, per new assessment

Golden State Warriors General Manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., left, shares a laugh with Warriors Co-Executive Chairman and CEO Joe Lacob during a press conference in 2023 at Chase Center in San Francisco. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group/TNS)

At $9.1 billion, the Warriors are the most valuable NBA franchise and the second-highest valued organization in all of U.S. professional sports, according to an annual valuation from Sportico.

Only the Dallas Cowboys are worth more than Golden State, according to both Sportico and Forbes, which valued the Warriors at $8.8 billion in October. The Warriors have been considered the most valuable franchise in the NBA since 2022.

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The Warriors’ value increased by 10% year over year, per Sportico. One contributing factor is their ownership of the Golden State Valkyries, the WNBA expansion team set for its inaugural season in 2025.

Warriors owner Joe Lacob, who also owns the Valkyries, bought the franchise in 2010 in a group with Peter Guber for $450 million. That means the franchise has increased roughly 1,900% in the 15 years since Lacob purchased the team.

The Warriors moved from Oracle Arena in Oakland to the Chase Center — the team’s massive, privately financed project — in 2019. Among the top 10 NBA franchises, only the Celtics and Lakers don’t own the arenas they play in.

A recent economic impact report estimated that the Chase Center generated $4.2 billion for the San Francisco economy since it opened through NBA games, concerts, live events and Thrive City activations.

Second on Sportico’s NBA franchise valuation list is the New York Knicks ($8.3 billion). The Lakers ($8.07 billion) rank third, and no other franchise is valued over $6 billion. The Boston Celtics, which are for sale, are valued at $5.66 billion.

The average NBA team is worth $4.6 billion, per Sportico, representing a 15% increase over last year. Despite recent concerns over television ratings, the league is buoyed by an 11-year media rights deal worth roughly $76 billion.

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