Kevin McClatchy

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Kevin S. McClatchy (born January 13, 1963 in Sacramento, CA) has been part-owner and General Partner of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team since 1996.

[edit] Early Life

Prior to purchasing the Pirates, he owned the minor-league Modesto A's.[citation needed] In addition to his baseball work, he is a director of The McClatchy Company, a newspaper publisher owned by his family. McClatchy was a brother in the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.[citation needed]

[edit] Time with Pirates

Kevin McClatchy was the leader and plurality investor in a group that paid $95 million for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1996. McClatchy immediately assumed the posts of chief executive officer and managing general partner, which are the offices traditionally staffed directly by owners in Major League Baseball. McClatchy is also a member of Major League Baseball's executive council and the labor and international committees.


At some point, which is not entirely known because the Pirates are a private corporation, G. Ogden Nutting and his family became the plurality and then majority owners in the franchise. Bob Nutting, Ogden's son, is now chairman of the board. The Nuttings, however, have consistently shied from the spotlight and allowed McClatchy to be the main or even sole voice of the ownership group. In 2006, McClatchy speculated aloud about resigning, possibly even selling the team, if the Pirates did not improve. He affirmed that he was frustrated with his own team, referencing popular and political complaints about an implied "promise" that the publicly-funded PNC Park would provide the owners will all the resources they needed to field a winning team. On October 4, 2006, however, McClatchy announced that despite another losing season, he would remain in his offices, and made only a few minor personnel changes.

[edit] Sources