Leonsis is the founder, managing partner, chairman and CEO of
Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which owns the
NHL's
Washington Capitals,
NBA's
Washington Wizards,
NBA G League's
Capital City Go-Go,
WNBA's
Washington Mystics, and formerly the
AFL's
Washington Valor and
Baltimore Brigade. Monumental Sports owns the
Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., and manages the
MedStar Capitals Iceplex and
George Mason University's
EagleBank Arena.
Arena partnership In 2023, Leonsis threatened to move the Washington Wizards and Capitals from the District of Columbia unless the city provided $600 million in
public funding for a major renovation of
Capital One Arena. Mayor
Muriel Bowser offered $500 million towards the proposed $800 million project to modernize the aging downtown arena for the Washington Wizards and Capitals. In December 2023, Leonsis and Virginia Governor
Glenn Youngkin announced that Virginia would offer more than $1.35 billion in taxpayer money to build a new venue for the Capitals and Wizards in Alexandria, Virginia, marking the largest public subsidy for such a project. Economists criticized Leonsis's actions as extortion, while scholars generally agree that stadium subsidies offer minimal economic benefits, contrary to the claims made by Monumental Sports & Entertainment. If the Youngkin-Leonsis deal had not been rejected by lawmakers, it would have the largest public
stadium subsidy of its kind.
Washington Capitals Leonsis has owned the Washington Capitals since the spring of 1999, and in that timeframe the team has won seven Southeast Division titles, six Metropolitan Division titles, three Presidents' Trophies, recorded 588 consecutive sellouts at Verizon Center (now Capital One Arena), and won a Stanley Cup championship. In the early years of his ownership, the Capitals won back-to-back Southeast Division titles in 2000 and 2001, but lost in the first round of the playoffs to the
Pittsburgh Penguins. In summer 2001, the Capitals traded for
Jaromír Jágr and signed him to what was, at the time, the largest contract in NHL history. The trade was enthusiastically well received by fans and over 300 people showed up at Dulles International Airport to greet Jágr when he arrived. After Jágr was traded in 2004, Leonsis was criticized by fans. He was involved in a physical altercation with a fan, who led a mocking chant of Leonsis during the game and hoisted a sign chiding him. In the altercation, Leonsis grabbed and threw the fan to the ground, which also caused a young child to fall to the ground. For his involvement in the scuffle, Leonsis was fined $100,000. He also received a suspension of one week, during which he was prohibited from having any contact with the team. After the incident, Leonsis personally called the fan to apologize for his actions and invited him and his family to watch a game in the owner's box. In 2007, he changed the Capitals team logo and its colors back to their original red, white, and blue. player
John Wall in 2010 In 2010, journalist
Damien Cox, author of the
Ovechkin Project, a biography of
Alexander Ovechkin, wrote that Leonsis was trying to circumvent the NHL's salary cap when signing Ovechkin's contract. He also alleged that Leonsis was bribing bloggers for positive coverage of the Capitals. Leonsis said that Cox was angry that he did not receive the access to Ovechkin that he wanted and defended his support for the league. During the 2009–2010 season, the Capitals earned the NHL's Presidents' Trophy as the team that finished with the most points in the league during the regular season. The 2010–2011 season marked the highest attendance in franchise history, drawing 754,309 fans. The Capitals, like other teams, have raised ticket prices in recent years. In 2011, after raising ticket prices for the fourth consecutive year while shrinking the size of beers sold at the Verizon Center, he earned the nickname "Leon$i$". In 2001, Leonsis claimed to have written a computer program that prevented Pittsburgh Penguins fans (the Capitals
first-round opponent) from purchasing tickets online. When asked if the actions were unfair, Leonsis stated, "I don't care. I'm going to keep doing it." Again in 2009, he received criticism for preventing visiting team fans from purchasing Capitals playoff tickets. and
Alexander Ovechkin during the 2018 Stanley Cup championship parade In the face of community opposition, Leonsis has persisted with a plan to expand the billboards around the Verizon Center. Critics said the signage would make the arena more garish and cheapen
DC's Chinatown, Leonsis said it was necessary to raise an additional $20 to 30 million in annual revenue, and a sports expert explained that "an owner saddled with underperforming teams is under greater pressure to find income sources." Leonsis persevered and in March 2013 construction of the new signs were announced. Leonsis was initially believed to have taken a fan-centric approach to running the franchise, thought to be listening and responding to the concerns of Wizards supporters through his email and personal website. After purchasing the Wizards, Leonsis criticized the NBA's
salary cap at a luncheon with business leaders. In 2010, the league fined him $100,000 for "unauthorized public comments regarding the league's collective bargaining negotiations." In May 2011, the Wizards unveiled a red, white, and blue color scheme, along with uniforms reminiscent of those worn by the team under their former name, the Bullets, when they won the
NBA championship in
1978. Additionally, he considered restoring the Bullets name to the franchise, though critics said that this would "send the wrong message" about
gun violence in Washington. Leonsis was chairman of the NBA's 2014 media committee that negotiated a nine-year expanded partnership with Turner Broadcasting and The Walt Disney Company. During Leonsis' tenure as owner, Washington ranks 24th of the 30 NBA franchises in winning percentage. The Wizards have missed the playoffs in eight of 13 seasons, have posted a .500 or worse record nine times, and have never advanced to the Eastern Conference finals.
Washington Mystics Leonsis purchased the rights to the
Washington Mystics, a
Women's National Basketball Association team, around the same time he took over the Wizards. The Mystics won a WNBA championship in 2019.
Washington Valor and Baltimore Brigade On March 10, 2016, Leonsis announced that he was purchasing an
expansion franchise in the
Arena Football League (AFL) to play at the Verizon Center beginning in 2017. On March 16, 2016, the expansion was confirmed by AFL commissioner
Scott Butera. On July 14, 2016, the team name was revealed as the
Washington Valor. On November 14, 2016, Monumental announced that it had acquired another AFL team that would begin play in 2017 in
Baltimore. The team name was later revealed as the
Baltimore Brigade. But in 2019, those teams went defunct, as the league went
bankrupt and dissolved.
Capital City Go-Go In 2018, Leonsis announced the purchase of an
NBA G League franchise that would be later named the
Capital City Go-Go. == Other businesses ==