Kasten was a longtime fixture in
Atlanta professional sports primarily due to his association with
Ted Turner. It started in 1979, when at age 27 he became the youngest general manager in the
National Basketball Association, for the Atlanta Hawks. He held this position until 1990, while becoming the Hawks' president in 1986. During his lengthy tenure in the Hawks' front office, Kasten became the first (and so far the only) NBA executive to win back-to-back
NBA Executive of the Year awards, accomplishing this feat in 1986 and 1987. He was also able to build Atlanta into a perennial playoff contender. Led by the Hall of Fame play of superstar
Dominique Wilkins, Kasten's Hawks achieved four straight 50-win seasons (1986–1989) and set franchise records in attendance. In the 1990s, he guided Atlanta to a stretch of seven consecutive playoff appearances, although they failed to reach the Conference Finals. Kasten would also become president of the Atlanta Braves in 1986. From 1987 to 2003, the Braves won more games than any other team in major league baseball. As president of the Braves, he delegated all baseball decisions to Atlanta GM
John Schuerholz, who put together strong, talented teams that consistently competed for the World Series. The Braves of that time, under the stellar on-field managerial leadership of
Bobby Cox, were centered on a powerful pitching staff which featured
Greg Maddux,
Tom Glavine,
Steve Avery and
John Smoltz. They also featured All-Star third baseman
Chipper Jones, who is regarded as one of the best hitters in Braves' history as well as one of the best switch-hitters and third basemen ever. From 1991 to 2005, the Braves won 14 straight division titles, 5 National League pennants and the
World Series championship in 1995 (The
1994 season was ended prematurely, without titles or postseason play, cut short by the
players' strike.) In 1999, when the
National Hockey League would award an expansion team to Atlanta, Kasten became president of the Atlanta Thrashers as well as chairman of the newly built
Philips Arena, now
State Farm Arena. He held all these positions - presidency of the Braves and Thrashers and chair of the Philips Arena - until he stepped down in 2003. He assumed the presidency of the
Washington Nationals in 2006 under the Lerner family ownership group. It was reported on September 23, 2010, that Kasten would step down as Nationals' team president. In January 2012, Kasten joined
Magic Johnson,
Peter Guber and
Guggenheim Baseball Management bidding for ownership of the
Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team. On March 27, it was reported that the partnership, led by Guggenheim controlling partner
Mark Walter, had submitted a winning bid of $2.15 billion (including surrounding land)—some 25% above the nearest offer. Kasten became team president once the sale closed, on April 30, 2012. As Dodgers president, Kasten won World Series championships in 2020, 2024 and 2025.
Personal life He is married to Helen Weisz Kasten, and has four children. ==Notes==