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and
Bill Belichick during the Patriots' visit to the White House in 2004
Robert K. Kraft, (born June 5,
1941 in
Brookline, Massachusetts) is the Entrepreneur,
Chair (official) & CEO of the
Kraft Group, a diversified holding company with assets in paper & packaging, sports & entertainment, real estate development and a private equity portfolio. His best known and most visible assets are the National Football League's New England Patriots and
Major League Soccer's
New England Revolution, as well as the stadium where they play,
Gillette Stadium.
Kraft is also the largest shareholder of Carmel Container Systems LTD, Israel's largest packaging plant. In 1997 he invested $40 million in a factory in
Caesarea (Israel) in order to provide his company, which employs 700 people, with the most advanced technology available. He is also currently on the Board of Directors of
Viacom, and served as a Trustee of Columbia University from 1992 to 2004.
Kraft is a 1963 graduate of Columbia University, which he attended on scholarship, and received an Master of Business Administration from
Harvard Business School in 1965. While at Columbia, Kraft played on the school's
Lightweight Football team. He is married to Myra Kraft, a 1964 graduate of
Brandeis University and the daughter of the late Worcester,_Massachusetts philanthropist Jacob Hiatt.
He began his career with the Rand-Whitney Group, a packaging company he later acquired. He still serves as this company's chairman. In
1972, he founded International Forest Products, a trader of physical paper commodities. The two combined companies make up the largest privately held paper and packaging companies in the United States. International Forest Products is consistently among the top 100 US exporters/importers and in 2005 was No. 45 on the
Journal of Commerce's list in that category.
In 1986, Kraft helped a minority business group acquire WNEV-TV, a CBS afilliate in Boston. He continued his investment in the entertainment field by buying several Boston radio stations.
A Patriots fan since their
American Football League days, he has been a season ticket holder since
1972. He bought an option on the parcel which contained Sullivan Stadium, then the home of the Patriots, in
1985. In
1988, he outbid several competitors to buy the stadium out of bankruptcy court for $25 million. It was renamed Foxboro Stadium in 1990. These transactions and Kraft's overall business success ultimately gave him the leverage to become owner of the New England Patriots.
In 1992, the Patriots themselves were bought by James Orthwein, a St. Louis, Missouri native. For the next two years, rumors of a Patriots move to St.Louis were rampant based on the fact that Orthwein wanted to return the NFL to a city that had lost the Arizona Cardinals in 1988. Finally, in
1994, Orthwein offered Kraft $75 million to buy out the remainder of the team's lease at the Foxboro Stadium. If Kraft agreed, it would free Orthwein to move the Patriots to St. Louis. Kraft turned him down, instead making a $175 million bid to buy the team and save the Patriots from relocation. Orthwein had little choice but to accept -- up to that point in history it was the highest price ever paid for a professional team. The price was especially remarkable since the Patriots were at that time one of the least-valued teams in the NFL.
Upon purchasing the team, Kraft made a commitment to Patriots fans that he would bring a Super Bowl and a state of the art facility for the team to New England. His follow-through on those promises would exceed even the wildest of expectations.
The day after the NFL approved the sale in January of 1994, Patriots fans showed their appreciation by purchasing almost 6,000 season tickets en route to selling out every game for the first time in the team's 34-year history. Every home game has been sold out since. The Patriots responded by putting together a 7-game winning streak to end the season, making the playoffs for the first time since 1986. In 1996, Kraft founded the expansion soccer club, the New England Revolution, which began playing along side the Patriots at Foxboro.
The Patriots appeared in Super Bowl XX under their original owners, the Sullivans. Yet, this was one of only six playoff appearances in 33 years. However, since Kraft bought the team, they have made the playoffs nine times in 13 years. Under Kraft's ownership, the Patriots have appeared in more NFL playoffs (19) than in the team's first 34 seasons combined (10). The team won American Football Conference East titles in 1996, 1997,
2001,
2003, 2004,
2005 and
2006 and represented the AFC in the Super Bowl in 1996 (lost), 2001 (won) 2003 (won) and 2004 (won). The Patriots dominated the NFL in 2003 and 2004 with identical 14-2 regular-season records -- a franchise record for a team that hadn't won more than 11 games in a season before Kraft bought the team.
The off-the-field quest for a new stadium was perhaps more difficult than winning championships on the field. After stadium plans that included revamping the area in Foxboro and several in and around the Boston area met a host of obstacles and fell through, the Patriots nearly moved to
Hartford, Connecticut in
1999. They reached an agreement with then Connecticut Governor John Rowland to move to a new stadium intended to be the cornerstone of downtown redevelopment. After Rowland lobbied the Connecticut legislature to approve state funds for the stadium the Patriots were given another opportunity to resume negotiations with the Massachusetts legislators who had initially balked on paying for site improvements for a new stadium in Foxboro. At the last minute the Massachusetts legislature approved the subsidies and hurdles were cleared for what became Gillette Stadium in their longtime home of Foxboro. The new stadium opened in
2002.
Kraft recently addressed the 2005 class of Columbia College upon their graduation regarding the driving forces in his life: "Family, Faith, Philanthropy, and FOOTBALL". In a break with commonly accepted spelling, Mr. Kraft termed this heady combination the "Four 'F's."
Later in 2005, a minor international incident was caused when it was reported that President of Russia
Vladimir Putin had inadvertently taken one of Kraft's three Super Bowl rings. Kraft quickly cleared up the misunderstanding, stating that he had given Putin the ring out of "respect and admiration" he had for Putin and the Russian people. However, Kraft's wife Myra states that the initial claim is true.
In
November 2005, met with Rick Parry, the Chief Executive of
England Football (soccer) team
Liverpool F.C.. Kraft is rumoured to be interested in investing money into the 2004-05 UEFA Champions League.
Kraft told BBC Radio Five Live: "Liverpool is a great brand and it's something our family respects a lot. We're always interested in opportunities and growing, so you never know what can happen."
Robert and his wife Myra have donated tens of millions of dollars to a variety of philanthropic causes including education, child and women issues, healthcare, youth sports and American and Israeli causes. Among the many institutions the Krafts have supported are Columbia University, Harvard Business School, Brandeis University, The College of the Holy Cross, Boston College, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston, and the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. One of their most unique projects is the Kraft Family Stadium in Jerusalem, built in 2000 and the host to a 33-team flag football league as well as other sporting events. In 2007, in recognition of a gift of $5 million in support of Columbia's intercollegiate athletics program, the playing field at Columbia's Lawrence A. Wien Stadium at the Baker Field Athletics Complex was named "Robert K. Kraft Field."
References
- ESPN: Super Bowl Ring was Gift to Putin
- BBC Sport: Kraft admits Liverpool interest
External links
- Patriots.com Biography
- RevolutionSoccer.net Biography
- The Kraft Group
- The Kraft Group (IFP Website)
- International Forest Products
- The Rand Whitney Group
- The Kraft Sports Group
- New England Patriots
- New England Revolution
- Patriot Place
- Forbes: The 400 Richest Americans: #297 Robert Kraft
- Forbes: The Largest Private Companies: #392 The Kraft Group
- Kraft Family Stadium In Jerusalem
{{succession box | before= [Sally Ride |
title= [Theodore Roosevelt Award (NCAA) |
years= '''2006''' |
after= [Paul Tagliabue
-->
and
Bill Belichick during the Patriots' visit to the White House in 2004
Robert K. Kraft, (born
June 5, 1941 in Brookline, Massachusetts) is the
Entrepreneur, Chair (official) &
CEO of the
Kraft Group, a diversified holding company with assets in paper & packaging, sports & entertainment, real estate development and a private equity portfolio. His best known and most visible assets are the
National Football League's New England Patriots and Major League Soccer's New England Revolution, as well as the stadium where they play, Gillette Stadium.
Kraft is also the largest shareholder of Carmel Container Systems LTD, Israel's largest packaging plant. In 1997 he invested $40 million in a factory in Caesarea (Israel) in order to provide his company, which employs 700 people, with the most advanced technology available. He is also currently on the Board of Directors of
Viacom, and served as a Trustee of
Columbia University from 1992 to 2004.
Kraft is a 1963 graduate of Columbia University, which he attended on scholarship, and received an
Master of Business Administration from Harvard Business School in 1965. While at Columbia, Kraft played on the school's Lightweight Football team. He is married to Myra Kraft, a 1964 graduate of
Brandeis University and the daughter of the late
Worcester,_Massachusetts philanthropist Jacob Hiatt.
He began his career with the
Rand-Whitney Group, a packaging company he later acquired. He still serves as this company's chairman. In 1972, he founded
International Forest Products, a trader of physical paper commodities. The two combined companies make up the largest privately held paper and packaging companies in the United States. International Forest Products is consistently among the top 100 US exporters/importers and in 2005 was No. 45 on the
Journal of Commerce's list in that category.
In 1986, Kraft helped a minority business group acquire WNEV-TV, a CBS afilliate in Boston. He continued his investment in the entertainment field by buying several Boston radio stations.
A Patriots fan since their American Football League days, he has been a season ticket holder since
1972. He bought an option on the parcel which contained Sullivan Stadium, then the home of the Patriots, in
1985. In
1988, he outbid several competitors to buy the stadium out of bankruptcy court for $25 million. It was renamed
Foxboro Stadium in
1990. These transactions and Kraft's overall business success ultimately gave him the leverage to become owner of the New England Patriots.
In
1992, the Patriots themselves were bought by James Orthwein, a St. Louis, Missouri native. For the next two years, rumors of a Patriots move to St.Louis were rampant based on the fact that Orthwein wanted to return the NFL to a city that had lost the
Arizona Cardinals in 1988. Finally, in 1994, Orthwein offered Kraft $75 million to buy out the remainder of the team's lease at the Foxboro Stadium. If Kraft agreed, it would free Orthwein to move the Patriots to St. Louis. Kraft turned him down, instead making a $175 million bid to buy the team and save the Patriots from relocation. Orthwein had little choice but to accept -- up to that point in history it was the highest price ever paid for a professional team. The price was especially remarkable since the Patriots were at that time one of the least-valued teams in the NFL.
Upon purchasing the team, Kraft made a commitment to Patriots fans that he would bring a Super Bowl and a state of the art facility for the team to New England. His follow-through on those promises would exceed even the wildest of expectations.
The day after the NFL approved the sale in January of 1994, Patriots fans showed their appreciation by purchasing almost 6,000 season tickets en route to selling out every game for the first time in the team's 34-year history. Every home game has been sold out since. The Patriots responded by putting together a 7-game winning streak to end the season, making the playoffs for the first time since
1986. In 1996, Kraft founded the expansion soccer club, the New England Revolution, which began playing along side the Patriots at Foxboro.
The Patriots appeared in Super Bowl XX under their original owners, the Sullivans. Yet, this was one of only six playoff appearances in 33 years. However, since Kraft bought the team, they have made the playoffs nine times in 13 years. Under Kraft's ownership, the Patriots have appeared in more NFL playoffs (19) than in the team's first 34 seasons combined (10). The team won
American Football Conference East titles in
1996, 1997, 2001,
2003,
2004,
2005 and
2006 and represented the AFC in the
Super Bowl in 1996 (lost), 2001 (won) 2003 (won) and 2004 (won). The Patriots dominated the NFL in 2003 and 2004 with identical 14-2 regular-season records -- a franchise record for a team that hadn't won more than 11 games in a season before Kraft bought the team.
The off-the-field quest for a new stadium was perhaps more difficult than winning championships on the field. After stadium plans that included revamping the area in Foxboro and several in and around the Boston area met a host of obstacles and fell through, the Patriots nearly moved to Hartford, Connecticut in 1999. They reached an agreement with then Connecticut Governor John Rowland to move to a new stadium intended to be the cornerstone of downtown redevelopment. After Rowland lobbied the Connecticut legislature to approve state funds for the stadium the Patriots were given another opportunity to resume negotiations with the Massachusetts legislators who had initially balked on paying for site improvements for a new stadium in Foxboro. At the last minute the Massachusetts legislature approved the subsidies and hurdles were cleared for what became Gillette Stadium in their longtime home of Foxboro. The new stadium opened in
2002.
Kraft recently addressed the 2005 class of Columbia College upon their graduation regarding the driving forces in his life: "Family, Faith, Philanthropy, and FOOTBALL". In a break with commonly accepted spelling, Mr. Kraft termed this heady combination the "Four 'F's."
Later in 2005, a minor international incident was caused when it was reported that President of Russia
Vladimir Putin had inadvertently taken one of Kraft's three Super Bowl rings. Kraft quickly cleared up the misunderstanding, stating that he had given Putin the ring out of "respect and admiration" he had for Putin and the Russian people. However, Kraft's wife Myra states that the initial claim is true.
In
November 2005, met with Rick Parry, the Chief Executive of England Football (soccer) team Liverpool F.C.. Kraft is rumoured to be interested in investing money into the 2004-05 UEFA Champions League.
Kraft told
BBC Radio Five Live: "Liverpool is a great brand and it's something our family respects a lot. We're always interested in opportunities and growing, so you never know what can happen."
Robert and his wife Myra have donated tens of millions of dollars to a variety of philanthropic causes including education, child and women issues, healthcare, youth sports and American and Israeli causes. Among the many institutions the Krafts have supported are Columbia University, Harvard Business School, Brandeis University, The College of the Holy Cross, Boston College, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston, and the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. One of their most unique projects is the Kraft Family Stadium in Jerusalem, built in 2000 and the host to a 33-team flag football league as well as other sporting events. In 2007, in recognition of a gift of $5 million in support of Columbia's intercollegiate athletics program, the playing field at Columbia's
Lawrence A. Wien Stadium at the Baker Field Athletics Complex was named "Robert K. Kraft Field."
References
- ESPN: Super Bowl Ring was Gift to Putin
- BBC Sport: Kraft admits Liverpool interest
External links
- Patriots.com Biography
- RevolutionSoccer.net Biography
- The Kraft Group
- The Kraft Group (IFP Website)
- International Forest Products
- The Rand Whitney Group
- The Kraft Sports Group
- New England Patriots
- New England Revolution
- Patriot Place
- Forbes: The 400 Richest Americans: #297 Robert Kraft
- Forbes: The Largest Private Companies: #392 The Kraft Group
- Kraft Family Stadium In Jerusalem
{{succession box | before= [Sally Ride |
title= [Theodore Roosevelt Award (NCAA) |
years= '''2006''' |
after= [Paul Tagliabue
-->