Cleveland Force On October 3, 1979, Wolstein purchased a majority interest in the Cleveland Force
Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) team from owners Eric Henderson and Frank Celeste for $25,000 ($ in dollars). The team, and the league, were just a year old. Within a year, he had more than doubled fan attendance at games to 5,000 from 2,000. The team struggled to win fans, obtain business community backing, and win games. But by 1983, it was in the playoffs, during which it drew 19,106 fans to its final playoff game. The team won almost two-thirds of its games over the next five seasons, and twice battled for the Eastern Division title. The team lost the championship series, zero games to four. The Force was the only team in the MISL to turn a profit that year. The team also set a league-high average attendance record of 14,121 fans that season. Wolstein folded the team in 1988, after the league ran into severe financial difficulties and four other MISL teams folded due to bankruptcy. In 2004, when
Major League Soccer made a two-team expansion, Wolstein signed a letter of intent to buy one of the franchises and base it in Cleveland. He also pledged to contribute $20 million ($ in dollars) toward the cost of a $110 million ($ in dollars) stadium for the team. According to press reports, Wolstein proposed to pay just 30 percent of the auction price in cash. The NFL would own the remaining 70 percent of the team. In a boost to his efforts, Wolstein recruited retired Browns
fullback Jim Brown and area automobile dealer Alan Spitzer as partners in the investment group. Wolstein was bidding against three others:
Al Lerner, billionaire owner of
MBNA, the nation's second-largest issuer of credit cards;
Charles Dolan, founder of
HBO and the
Cablevision cable television service, and his attorney brother,
Larry Dolan; and
New York City banker and real estate developer
Howard Milstein. As the bidding price rose above $400 million ($ in dollars), Wolstein's bid was seen as increasingly unattractive. On September 8, 1998, the NFL sold the Cleveland Browns franchise rights to the Al Lerner group for $450 million ($ in dollars). ==Philanthropy==