ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A detailed assessment of the hurricane damage to Tropicana Field concludes that the home of the Tampa Bay Rays is structurally sound and can be repaired for about $55.7 million in time for the 2026 season.
The 412-page report released Tuesday by the city of St. Petersburg, which owns the building, found that the basic structure of the domed stadium “does not appear to have been adversely affected” by Hurricane Milton’s winds, which shredded most of its fabric roof.
“The primary structure is serviceable and capable of supporting a replacement tension membrane fabric roof,” said the report by Hennessy Construction Services.
Eighteen of the ballpark’s 24 fabric panels failed when Milton roared ashore Oct. 9, the report found. There was also damage to interior parts of the Trop, as it’s known for short, from rainwater and other storm-related causes. The ballpark opened in 1990 and has been the Rays’ home since their inception in 1998.
The Rays did not immediately respond Tuesday to a request for comment. Since the ballpark, under this damage and repair assessment, would not be ready until the 2026 season, the Rays must find another place to play next year.
Major League Baseball wants the Rays to remain in the area near their fan base if at all possible, with several Tampa Bay-area spring training sites suggested. These include ballparks in Clearwater (Phillies), Tampa (Yankees), Dunedin (Blue Jays), Sarasota (Orioles), Lakeland (Tigers) and the Rays’ own spring training home in Port Charlotte. Most of these locations host minor league teams in the summer.
Tropicana Field is already scheduled to be demolished when a new, $1.3 billion ballpark is finished in time for the 2028 season. With unforeseen costs to the city and Pinellas County from two hurricanes — vast amounts of debris removal, damage to parks and infrastructure — two of the main financial sources for the new ballpark could reconsider those plans or decide not to repair the Trop at all.
The St. Petersburg City Council will discuss the report at its Nov. 21 meeting.
“We have so much need across the city,” council member Brandi Gabbard said at a meeting last week. “I love the Rays. I love Tropicana Field. It’s not about not wanting to do this. It’s about a balance of priorities.”
The council recently approved $6.5 million to clean up the ballpark and protect it from any further damage, including waterproofing areas such as the press box, seating areas and scoreboard.
The city does have an insurance claim for the damage and repairs, but it includes a $22 million deductible and probably would cover only part of the overall costs. That means taxpayer dollars would have to be used.
The planned new Rays ballpark is part of a $6.5 billion project that will include affordable housing, a Black history museum, retail and office space, and restaurants and bars. The project is known as the Historic Gas Plant District, which was once a thriving Black community but was displaced by construction of the ballpark and an interstate highway.
The only game that coaches love more than coaching an actual game is the game of “Hey, who have you coached with?”
Hey Coach, nice to meet you.
Good to meet you, too, Coach.
Coach, didn’t you coach with the same coach I coached with when we were assistant coaches for that one head coach?
Yes, I did, Coach. He’s a helluva guy. And a helluva coach. And the head coach we coached under …
Now, that’s a helluva guy and helluva coach.
They fist-bump (or hold up their drinks) and say in unison: To Coach!
As the newest edition of the College Football Playoff begins, that conversation will be taking place on sidelines and in hotel bars from Oxford to Oregon. And nearly every toast/dedication will be in honor of a man whose still-growing legacy stands out in a forest of coaching trees like a crimson-colored sequoia.
“I know there are a lot of coaching trees out there that were started by a lot of legends,” Kirby Smart said on the eve of winning the SEC championship game in Atlanta. After a decade at the helm of the Georgia Bulldogs, he has planted quite the nursery of saplings himself. “But I’m not sure anyone can match what Nick Saban has done when it comes to preparing coaches, getting them ready to run their own programs.”
Smart smartly points out that to him, a “coaching tree” isn’t about where someone started their career or how many years they spent with a coach, but rather the influence that root coach has, even if the assistant served on his staff for only one season.
“To me, it’s about the mentor aspect of it,” Smart said of Saban during the same weekend when he said he called Saban for advice and also did a live interview with Saban on “College GameDay.” “Can I call that coach whenever I need to, even if I am now coaching against him in the same conference, with questions or needing advice? That’s real influence. And I think that’s the relationship we would tell you that we all have with him.”
Added Indiana Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti: “He’s not coached a game in nearly two years, and I think his influence has only grown since then. I can’t speak for 150 years of college football history, who all worked for Bear Bryant or Knute Rockne or those guys. But there’s certainly zero argument about Nick Saban’s impact in the here and now.”
Here, in the second edition of a 12-team CFP format, and now, as that bracket begins with the first of four opening-round games Friday night when Alabama faces Oklahoma, five of those dozen teams are led by former Saban assistants. That includes four of the top six teams, with all five ranked in the top nine.
It does not include two teams that barely missed the playoff, ranked 13th and 25th, or the coach who was running the sixth-ranked team but left to lead another school … oh, by the way, a team that Saban once coached to a national title and a move that said coach made only after talking to Saban about the decision. Nor does it include the many others who run programs around the country, deployed throughout every level of college football.
The CFP list:
• Indiana, led by Cignetti, who was on Saban’s initial Alabama staff in 2007, working for five seasons as a wide receivers coach and as the recruiting coordinator who stockpiled Heisman winners, NFL first-round draft picks and a pair of national titles.
• Georgia, led by Smart, who worked for Saban at LSU, Alabama and even the Miami Dolphins, 11 seasons in all, during which he collected four nattys.
• Oregon, led by Dan Lanning, who served as a graduate assistant under Saban at Bama during the 2015 national title run before taking a full-time assistant job at Memphis and then joining Smart at Georgia.
• Ole Miss, led by Pete Golding, who worked as a defensive coach under the famously defense-obsessed Saban for five years, including the 2020 national championship season, before leaving to join the staff at Ole Miss. He was hired there by another former Saban assistant, Lane Kiffin. Now Golding will make his head coaching debut in the CFP, pushed into that role after Kiffin’s less-than-smooth departure for LSU.
• And finally, Miami, coached by Mario Cristobal, who was hired by Saban at Alabama in 2013 after losing his head coaching job at Florida International. Cristobal oversaw the offensive line, carried the title of assistant head coach, but like Cignetti, had his greatest impact in the role of recruiting coordinator. When Cristobal left Tuscaloosa at the end of the 2016 season, he did so with four SEC titles and a 2015 national championship ring.
The near-CFP list:
• 13th-ranked Texas, the first team out of the playoff, led by Steve Sarkisian, who like Kiffin and Cristobal, is a graduate of the Nick Saban head coach rehabilitation and career rejuvenation program. Amid personal struggles with addiction and professional struggles as USC’s head coach, Sark was brought to Bama by Saban as an offensive assistant in 2016 and again from 2019 to 2020. Together, they won a pair of SEC titles and the 2020 natty before Sarkisian left for Austin.
• 25th-ranked Georgia Tech, which stayed in the ACC title fight all season and nearly upset Georgia over Rivalry Week, led by Brent Key. Key was Saban’s offensive line coach for three seasons, including for the 2017 natty.
Some of the rest (always subject to change as this unprecedented coaching carousel-turned-Gravitron keeps spinning):
“I think if you talk to any of us who worked on one of Nick’s staffs, we all have a list of coaches who have influenced us and have served as mentors,” O’Brien said in July, when he was about to begin his second season at Boston College and his fourth overall as a college head coach. O’Brien’s career also includes seven years as the Houston Texans’ head coach, five years as an offensive coach in the high holy days of Tom Brady and Bill Belichick’s New England Patriots, and two years as Saban’s offensive coordinator in 2021 and ’22.
“The question becomes what did you take away from someone? How did they change you? I had been an NFL head coach and the head coach at Penn State at a really challenging time. But he showed me organization on a level that I had never experienced, from practice to how you run a meeting to how you deal with the outside obligations. I think anyone who spent time with him will tell you that.”
They do indeed. Every single Saban apprentice we spoke to this season about this topic certainly did. But no one talked about schemes or any plan of football attack. Instead, every discussion about their lessons with the seven-time national champion centered on process and details. Not how to tackle ball carriers but rather tackling whatever problems players might carry into their office.
“I worked for him for one year, that was it, but it gave me this cheat sheet on every possible situation you can think of,” said Lanning, who is quick to say he doesn’t run his day-to-day operation as meticulously as Saban, but is “addicted” to studying and emulating Saban’s devotion to consistency. “No matter what the question is for him, his answer is like a teacher’s lesson. ‘Dan, when I was faced with this, these were the three things that I did …’ He always has that answer. That’s a leader.”
As for Saban himself, the master of details is well aware of his impact, even if he tries to sidestep a conversation about it.
“I’m not a tree expert, but I do know you can’t grow one tree unless you have something from another tree. A pine cone or whatever. Wherever the seeds come from has to come from somewhere else,” he said earlier this fall, when his disciples and their teams made up six spots in the AP top 10, not to mention Alabama, which is not led by a former Saban staffer, but is housed in a building where he still has an office. “For me, that was Don James. I played for Coach James at Kent State. It’s George Perles. I learned under him at Michigan State. They learned from guys like Bump Elliott and Chuck Noll. And they learned from guys like Paul Brown. You know who those guys are, right?”
Sure. James, national championship coach and College Football Hall of Famer. Perles, Rose Bowl winner, two-time Big Ten champion, godfather of Pittsburgh’s Steel Curtain defense. Noll, four-time Super Bowl-winning coach of those Steelers. Elliott, Big Ten champ, Michigan coach and legendary Iowa athletic director. Paul Brown, high school teammate of a member of the famed Notre Dame Four Horsemen and, oh yeah, pretty much the inventor of modern football. A man whose attention to detail made Saban look downright slack. Brown once traded away a future Pro Football Hall of Famer for burping during a team meeting.
Saban connecting his coaching mentees to the greatest coaching mentors of a century ago is not an accident. It is a GOAT-level version of the “Hey, who have you coached with?” game, played by the same man who just so happens to be squarely in the middle of that endless coaching tree, braiding together the branches of today with those of yesteryear.
“As much as football and the business of football evolves, the fundamentals of coaching still come down to what they have always come down to,” the sequoia said. “It is our job to take what we learned, figure out how that translates into today’s job and then make damn sure the next generation who is learning it from us is ready to teach it to the ones who work for them.”
The Washington Nationals have hired Ani Kilambi as their new general manager, the team announced Thursday.
Kilambi will switch organizations in the National League East after previously being an assistant general manager for the Philadelphia Phillies, working with that club since 2021.
Before that, he was with the Tampa Bay Rays for more than five years.
“Our goal is to be the highest performing organization in baseball,” Kilambi said in a statement. “To do so, we aim to exemplify our core values of joy, humility, integrity and competitiveness, while displaying sharp eyes for talent and best-in-class player development. I’m excited to call Washington, D.C. my home and cannot wait to get started.”
Kilambi takes over a job that was held for more than a decade and a half by Mike Rizzo, who became the general manager in Washington in 2009 and added the title of president of baseball operations in 2013. Rizzo was fired in July during the Nationals’ sixth consecutive losing season. Manager Dave Martinez also was fired then.
Rizzo and Martinez were in charge in 2019 when the Nationals won the World Series, but the team hasn’t had a winning year since. Washington went 66-96 in 2025, putting it 14th out of 15 clubs in the National League.
Mike DeBartolo took over as interim general manager after Rizzo was let go and oversaw the selection of 17-year-old high school shortstop Eli Willits with the No. 1 pick in Major League Baseball’s amateur draft in July.
Paul Toboni, 35, was hired in late September to run the Nationals. Toboni, who had been an assistant general manager with the Boston Red Sox, brought in manager Blake Butera, who at 33 became the youngest skipper in the majors since the 1970s.
“Ani has earned a reputation around the industry as one of the brightest front office minds in the game,” Toboni said in a statement. “He’s not only a sharp and strategic leader who is a great communicator, but he is also thoughtful and humble and aligns with our values. Ani is an excellent complement to the leadership group we have in place, both in terms of his past experiences and who he is as a person.”
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
The Tigers have added one of baseball’s most accomplished closers, but it will be up to manager A.J. Hinch whether Kenley Jansen takes on that role in Detroit.
Jansen and the Tigers finalized a one-year, $11 million contract Wednesday that includes a club option for another season. Jansen joins a Detroit bullpen that has operated without a designated closer under Hinch, who is being given the decision on whether to continue that pattern.
“It’s going to be A.J.’s call,” general manager Scott Harris told reporters.
Jansen, a right-hander who is fourth on the career list with 476 saves, is a four-time All-Star who was National League Reliever of the Year in 2016 and 2017. He trails only Hall of Famers Mariano Rivera (652), Trevor Hoffman (601) and Lee Smith (478) in saves.
“He’s one of the best to ever do it,” said Harris, who previously worked in the San Francisco Giants‘ front office. “I’ve admired him from afar — and up close in the NL West.”
Jansen leads active players with 933 appearances, including 62 last season with the Los Angeles Angels. He was 5-4 with a 2.59 ERA and 29 saves in 30 chances in 2025 after signing a one-year, $10 million deal with the Angels.
He had 25 or more saves in each of the past 13 nonshortened seasons. He had 40-plus saves for the fourth time in 2022 when he led the NL with 41 for the Atlanta Braves.
Jansen, 38, is getting a $9 million salary next season, and the Tigers hold a $12 million option with a $2 million buyout.
The 6-foot-5, 265-pound Jansen helped teams advance to the postseason 10 times, including in 2020 with the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
Detroit has been in the playoffs the past two years and is making moves to improve its chances of returning to the postseason. What the franchise chooses to do with two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal this offseason will be closely watched.
Skubal, 29, is entering his final year of club control by the Tigers, who last won a World Series in 1984.
Harris said he was not interested in discussing hypothetical options with Skubal.
“We have a good team right now, and we’re trying to win,” Harris said.
The Tigers have added some quality pitchers, agreeing to a two-year, $19 million contract with right-hander Kyle Finnegan and a one-year, $7 million deal with right-hander Drew Anderson.
Detroit has not, however, made any major moves to improve its performance at the plate after an uneven season offensively. The Tigers finished one game behind AL Central champion Cleveland, defeated the Guardians in a three-game series and lost to Seattle in a division series.
Harris said the team is counting on returning players to develop during the offseason.
“Just because a lot of the names are the same, doesn’t mean the team is the same,” Harris said.