I don’t know what any of it means but college football is dead.(I really just wanted to rile up an opinion on this)
To be fair, each one of those companies had its own particular problems that put them on a bad path. PE involvement likely didn't help, but each one would have gone down anyway. I have some experience with Hooters (strictly professional) and could see they were in trouble years ago.Private Equity plundered Sears, Toys R Us and of course Hooters.
I'm sure this will be fine, though.
Hooters stopped hiring attractive women.To be fair, each one of those companies had its own particular problems that put them on a bad path. PE involvement likely didn't help, but each one would have gone down anyway. I have some experience with Hooters (strictly professional) and could see they were in trouble years ago.
Undoubtedly. Asshole Capitalism meets Asshole Capitalism.To be fair, each one of those companies had its own particular problems that put them on a bad path. PE involvement likely didn't help, but each one would have gone down anyway. I have some experience with Hooters (strictly professional) and could see they were in trouble years ago.
As a scumbag finance bro, I don’t think this will work like the typical big box PE play where it’s load up the legacy firm with debt and spin off the real estate assets. These institutions are driven by location because Florida State would not work as Florida State-Delaware, which is different than a Sears.
The most likely outcome is that the PE firms will take over the administrative functions of the sports departments (marketing/HR/ops). They’ll say something like “streamline efficiencies” which is just decimating live service and getting janky AI response bots. Most probable outcome is that a stadium like Doak Campbell becomes Wells Fargo Doak Campbell Stadium and the live support team for ticketing is handled by a teenager in New Delhi.