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Trop repairs remain on schedule for new owners 

A city memo notes that staff are monitoring Tropicana Field for “additional damage caused by extreme weather,” including an Aug. 23 storm that dumped four inches of rain on the area.

Mark Parker

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St. Petersburg officials expect crews to have eight of Tropicana Field's 24 roof panels installed by the end of the week. Photo: City of St. Petersburg.

While the Tampa Bay Rays’ new ownership group must determine a long-term stadium solution, Tropicana Field remains on track to host Major League Baseball by Opening Day 2026. 

Contractors have installed six of the hurricane-damaged stadium’s 24 roof panels, and that number should increase to eight by the end of this week. Rays and MLB officials have also reviewed and approved interior finishes, according to a memo from City Development Administrator James Corbett. 

Corbett provided St. Petersburg City Council members with an update on the repair process Sept. 19. His memo came just three days before MLB announced that it approved the $1.7 billion sale of the Rays to a group led by Jacksonville developer Patrick Zalupski. 

“I’m glad we’re on track to welcome our Rays back home for Opening Day,” Councilmember Gina Driscoll told the Catalyst. “With a repaired stadium and new ownership, it’s a fresh start for baseball in St. Petersburg.” 

Stakeholders expect the team’s sale to close by Friday, and that Zalupski’s group will prioritize finding a permanent home in Tampa. However, the Rays are legally obligated to play in St. Petersburg through the 2028 baseball season.

The city has allocated roughly $60 million to repair the Trop since Hurricane Milton shredded its roof in October 2024. Bresjesh Prayman, engineering and capital improvement director, said in early August that the extensive project could now cost approximately $75 million. 

Councilmember Richie Floyd noted that “ownership doesn’t change anything about the contracts we have with the organization.” He also appreciates the repairs remaining on schedule, and hopes to see the same sense of urgency “with every project we do in the city going forward.” 

The $75 million estimate could continue increasing as the domed stadium was not designed to drain water. Corbett wrote that city staff are monitoring for “additional damage caused by extreme weather,” including an Aug. 23 storm that dumped four inches of rain on the area. 

He said officials are coordinating with the project’s lead contractor, AECOM Hunt, to amend the scope “as necessary.” Subcontractor BMS Cat “remains onsite performing daily cleaning, remediation and protective measures to preserve work completed to date.” 

“MLB continues active participation in weekly project meetings and is working directly with AECOM Hunt on baseball specialty item approvals, including netting and outfield wall padding,” Corbett wrote. “All repair milestones remain on schedule.” 

The bright white fabric used to cover the Trop was manufactured in Germany and assembled in China. Corbett’s memo states that AECOM Hunt has assigned a representative from its Shanghai office to monitor the process. 

Crews should have the roof installed by the end of the year. Hurricane season officially ends Nov. 1. 

“We’ve already seen some cost escalation on this project, but I think we prepared from the get-go for rain inundation in the stadium … how to mitigate any sort of damage that would happen from weather,” Floyd said. “But you’re never going to be able to block out things when there’s four inches of rain. 

“So, it’s just an ongoing concern, really.” 

Tarps cover Tropicana Field’s seats in April of this year. Photo by Mark Parker.

Corbett wrote that project architects and engineers have submitted interior repair permit drawings for review. The Rays and MLB have approved new flooring, wall coverings and paint selections. 

Insurance representatives and the city’s risk management team toured the stadium Sept. 15 to “review progress.” Corbett said staff from multiple departments continue working with Thompson Consulting, the Florida Department of Emergency Management and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to identify “potential reimbursement opportunities.” 

In August, City Attorney Jackie Kovilaritch said the only reimbursements would come from insurance and FEMA. She added that there is no guarantee St. Petersburg would receive the latter funding. 

In March, the Rays’ current owner, Stuart Sternberg, exited a long-negotiated deal for a new $1.37 billion ballpark to anchor the $6.7 billion Historic Gas Plant District redevelopment at the Trop site. The team spent its 2025 season at Steinbrenner Field, a minor league stadium in Tampa, while navigating the far-reaching effects of an unprecedented hurricane season. 

At the time, Rays president Brian Auld, who will remain with the team in an advisory role, noted that “two hurricanes, the elections local and nationally, changed things.” 

Every single significant real estate development and business deal has been altered by those things,” Auld added. “It shouldn’t be stunning that this one has, too.” 

Floyd said Monday that he “never felt any animosity towards the old ownership outside of the annoyance of them wasting our time on the (stadium) project.” He recognized that they were “operating in a business capacity,” which prioritized profit margins. 

“I don’t anticipate that philosophy changing with the new ownership; maybe a style change is possible,” Floyd continued. “I’m going to continue to do everything I can to make sure the city’s interests are protected, no matter who owns the team.” 

 

 

 

4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. Avatar

    Chuck Bohac

    September 24, 2025at9:17 pm

    I agree with the comments from John, Alan and Ken, all reasonable responses. Maybe a more reasonable deal can be structured with the buyers but not with the financially incapacitated members of the City Council and the mayor. If the buyers can wait until more financially informed council and mayor are elected during the next election perhaps a more reasonable agreement can be reached to the benefit of the city taxpayers and the ball club. No agreement between the current mayor/council and ball club should be a commitment from the taxpayers.

  2. Avatar

    Ken August

    September 24, 2025at10:52 am

    The amazing quote of Rays president Brian Auld that “two hurricanes, the elections local and nationally, changed things” keeps being used without any reality check.

    Were the Rays unaware that elections were scheduled for November 2024? That polls had the Dems trailing locally and nationally. All of these were in place when the Rays request for funding from the City and County was approved in late July. When the Here to Stay press conference followed soon after.

    What I think really happened: the Sternberg Group was soliciting a partial or complete sale of the team to raise cash at the same time they were promising to co-develop the Trop site with Hines as part of the bond deal with the City and the County. Sternberg Existing Co-owners’ lawsuit (alleging break of the partnership agreement) was settled in June 2024. Likely a material payment was made to pay those people off. At some point, those folks engaged in a full/partial acquisition walked and leaked their frustrations to the Sports Business Journal in Sept 2024 (before the Hurricanes) about the effort of Sternberg to sell. That article (justifiably) spooked local officials. So when they came asking for more money and to renegotiate the deal after the hurricanes, they asked for a time out. With that fig leaf as cover, Brian Auld was sent out there to say: never mind a decade of negotiating to get public dollars, Matt Silverman’s house floods and suddenly we are backing out on our own deal. Shameless corporate behavior. Good riddance to them. Good luck to the new group. A fanbase that just wants to be appreciated awaits you.

  3. Avatar

    Alan DeLisle

    September 24, 2025at5:26 am

    We should all thank MLB for forcing the sale of the Rays. If I was the new ownership I would focus on advice from sports franchises that are beloved by the community. I would start with the Lightning.

    You can make money AND create family at the same time. It starts by not looking down on the community and thinking you are the smartest person in the room. To the new ownership: clean house and start fresh. I know you will.

    To the St Pete public: follow the lead of MLB. Clean house, start fresh. Give Welch and the sold out five Council members the pink slip.

    What a debacle, but it’s time to move forward and put the great city of St Pete first. I hope the Chamber of Commerce is listening along with all the organizations that supported this terrible deal for selfish reasons.

  4. Avatar

    John Donovan

    September 23, 2025at8:05 pm

    If Tampa/Hillsborough comes up with $2 bilion for a domed stadium, good for them. Matters not to the TV audience. In the meantime, a $300 million refurbishment could make Tropicana Field wonderful for another 20 years. And the larger Tropicana Field property can still redeveloped to a spectacular city treasure.

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