
The Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) has approved the sale of the Atlanta Dream to a new investor group on Friday, after a turbulent run with the team’s previous co-owner Kelly Loeffler.
Larry Gottesdiener, the chairman of real estate firm Northland, leads the three-member group that includes Northland President and COO Suzanne Abair and two-time WNBA champion Renee Montgomery, who will also serve as an executive.
“Today marks a new beginning for the Atlanta Dream organization,” WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement. “I admire [Gottesdiener and Abair’s] passion for women’s basketball, but more importantly, have been impressed with their values.
The sale closes the chapter on months of acrimony between Dream players and Loeffler, a former senator and staunch supporter of former Republican U.S. President Donald Trump, who lost her seat in a Georgia runoff vote last month against Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock.
Loeffler criticized the league last year for supporting the Black Lives Matter movement, calling it “a very divisive organization based on Marxist principles,” prompting outcry from Dream players, who called for the team to be sold and campaigned for Warnock.
Montgomery, who opted out of the 2020 season to advocate for social justice and has since retired, is the first former player to become both a team owner and an executive, the league said.
“My dream has come true,” Montgomery said. “Breaking barriers for minorities and women by being the first former WNBA player to have both a stake in ownership and a leadership role with the team is an opportunity that I take very seriously.”