After previous failed attempts to bring Major League Baseball to the state of Colorado (most notably the
Pittsburgh Pirates nearly relocating to Denver following the
Pittsburgh drug trials in 1985), by the late 1980s a team seemed to be a possibility in Denver. Eugene Orza, associate general counsel of the
Major League Baseball Players Association, stated that he expected Denver would receive one of the expansion franchises. The Colorado Baseball Commission, led by banking executive Larry Varnell, was successful in getting Denver voters to approve a 0.1% sales tax to help finance a new baseball stadium. Also, an advisory committee was formed in 1990 by then-Governor of Colorado
Roy Romer to recruit an ownership group. The group selected was led by John Antonucci, an Ohio beverage distributor, and
Michael I. Monus, the head of the
Phar-Mor drugstore chain. Local and regional companies—such as Erie Lake, Hensel Phelps Construction,
KOA Radio, and the
Rocky Mountain News—rounded out the group. The Denver group chose to call their franchise the
Colorado Rockies, the same name used as the
National Hockey League franchise that played in Denver from 1976 to 1982. ==Miami, Florida==