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San Diego Padres owner Peter Seidler dies at age 63

San Diego Padres owner Peter Seidler stands on the field before the team's baseball game against the Seattle Mariners
San Diego Padres owner Peter Seidler stands on the field before a 2016 game against the Seattle Mariners. The team announced Tuesday that Seidler has died at age 63. (Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)

San Padres owner Peter Seidler, who spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to bring a long-elusive World Series championship to San Diego, died on Tuesday, the team announced. He was 63.

A cause of death wasn't disclosed. Seidler, a third-generation member of the O'Malley family that used to own the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers, was a two-time cancer survivor. The team announced in mid-September that Seidler had an unspecified medical procedure in August and wouldn't be back at the ballpark the rest of the year.

Read more: Shaikin: Padres' Peter Seidler, baseball's risky spender: 'There's a risk to doing nothing'

Seidler was part of a group that purchased the Padres in 2012 and bought out Ron Fowler’s majority stake in November 2020. Seidler also bought Rawlings in conjunction with MLB in 2018.

It was with Seidler’s blessing that the Padres boosted their payroll to about $258 million on opening day, third-highest in the majors, after making a stirring run to the NL Championship Series the previous fall.

Seidler often shrugged off questions about whether the Padres' big spending on players like Manny Machado and Xander Bogaerts was sustainable and mentioned how badly he wanted a championship parade for a city that has never had one.

“Do I believe our parade is going to be on land or on water or on both?” he said.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.