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Ryan said he had not been aware that the team could appeal to the bankruptcy judge if Major League Baseball rejected a request to change the budget. Ryan also said some of the budget-cutting decisions came last year after team owner Tom Hicks' sports group defaulted on about $525 million in loans to lenders.
Leblanc also tried to show that the financing guarantee for the Greenberg-Ryan group, which bid about $575 million and was chosen as the buyer after bidding last year, may not expire on Aug. 12.
But Greenberg testified Wednesday that the funding expires 180 days from Feb. 12, when the first papers were executed -- not later dates when the group's purchase agreement was revised. He said his investors and lenders were already frustrated in the sale's delay.
"We were anticipating (closing the deal) in early April," Greenberg said.
The Rangers wanted to sell the team to Greenberg-Ryan's group and repay creditors $75 million when it filed for bankruptcy. Since then, angry creditors have complained that the Greenberg-Ryan bid wasn't the highest and squabbles and even lawsuits have come over everything from document access to the bidding procedures.
At least four other bidders have emerged: Houston businessman Jim Crane and Dallas investor Jeff Beck, both cleared by MLB to submit bids, and two unidentified parties. There has been speculation that Dallas Mavericks owner and billionaire Mark Cuban is one of them, though he has said only that he is "interested."
[Associated Press;
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