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Major League Baseball announced yesterday that the Montreal Expos will move to the District, in one day turning 33 years of frustration and heartache for the Washington area into unbridled joy.
"This was a long, arduous and very, very difficult process," said Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig, who called city officials shortly after 4 p.m. to inform them of the decision. "But this was a very impressive bid. It showed real commitment, [the city's] dedication to getting something done. They were tenacious. And so I would say from a Washington standpoint, this was their finest hour."
D.C. officials, former Washington Senators players and hundreds of fans jammed into City Museum in Northwest for a celebratory press conference, an event dreamt about for years but thought by many to be a hope never to be realized.
"I'm beyond thrilled," said D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams, who, along with many other city officials, sported a red Senators cap. "The American game is rounding third and at last heading back home to the nation's capital."
The announcement by Major League Baseball (MLB) came 80 years to the day after the original Washington Senators won the American League pennant and one day shy of the 33rd anniversary of the final game played in Washington by the expansion Senators franchise.
The Washington area came close to getting a team several times since that game, most notably in 1974 when the San Diego Padres came close to moving to the District. In 1995, Virginia telecommunications executive William Collins held a tentative deal to buy the Houston Astros and move them to Northern Virginia, but the agreement fell through.
It was not until six months ago, when Mr. Williams finally agreed to meet MLB's demand to build a ballpark for the Expos financed completely with public bonds, that baseball in Washington moved significantly closer to becoming a reality.
The Washington club will begin play at RFK Stadium in April and stay there for at least three seasons. Legislative work on a $440 million public-financing package for a new ballpark planned in Southeast near the Anacostia waterfront will begin immediately.
A new nickname for the Expos has not been decided, but Mr. Selig said that likely will be determined by opening day. The leading candidates include Nationals, Grays and Senators. The latter name still is the property of the Texas Rangers, the club that the Senators franchise became after it left the District in 1971.
Legislation on the stadium financing will be introduced to the D.C. Council tomorrow. The stadium would be financed by a combination of ballpark-related sales taxes, rent payments from the team's owners and a gross-receipts tax on large D.C. businesses.









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