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"It's sad," said Tom Lasorda, who managed the Dodgers to their last World Series title in 1988 and serves as special adviser to McCourt.
"I've spent 62 years in this organization and I've never seen anything like this happen. Frank loved the Dodgers. A lot of people may not realize that, but he really loved the Dodgers."
Selig's move came after the Los Angeles Times reported this week that Frank McCourt had arranged a $30 million loan from Fox, the team's television partner. Selig has not approved a $200 million loan from Fox to the club, which was first proposed by the Dodgers last summer, and the Times said the money was needed to make payroll.
"I don't think it's going to affect us," catcher Rod Barajas said. "They're not going to break us up and sell guys because they can't make payroll."
McCourt and the team have been criticized for poor security since Giants fan Bryan Stow was beaten as he left Dodger Stadium following the season opener. Stow remains in a medically induced coma.
As of Wednesday, the Dodgers had averaged 38,320 fans, down 11 percent from their average last season.
The Dodgers have not won a World Series since 1988, the longest barren stretch for the franchise since winning its first title as the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1955.
"I commend Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig's (wresting) control of the Dodgers and bringing integrity back to the game," Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich said. "It is my hope that the commissioner appoints a representative from the O'Malley family to oversee the team's business affairs during the investigation -- a return of the O'Malley family to the Dodgers would be a home run for fans and the Dodgers."
The O'Malley family owned the Dodgers from 1950-98. The McCourts purchased the Dodgers from Fox, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., for $430 million in 2004. Payroll dropped in both 2010 and 2011; even though it stands at nearly $104 million, the Dodgers were 12th among the 30 teams on opening day.
Martin McGinty, a 73-year-old Dodgers fan from Arcadia, Calif., welcomed the takeover news.
"McCourt wants to spend no money and attendance is way down," he said. "People are becoming disgusted at the way McCourt is handling the team. It's time they get somebody who'll spend some money. This is L.A. You need to spend money and have a decent team."
Selig's move might be seen by some as a precedent should the New York Mets have additional financial problems. With owners Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz under pressure from a lawsuit tied to the Bernard Madoff swindle, the Mets borrowed $25 million last year from Major League Baseball. Unlike the McCourts, Wilpon is a longtime friend of Selig.
[Associated Press;
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