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Vince Naimoli

Vincent Joseph Naimoli (September 16, 1937 – August 25, 2019) was an American businessman, and the first owner of the Major League Baseball team the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Naimoli's father was an Italian immigrant who worked for the New York City Subway system and became a self-taught stationary engineer. Naimoli was born in Paterson, New Jersey and attended Paterson Central High School. He attended the University of Notre Dame, graduating in 1959 and earning a master's degree in mechanical engineering from New Jersey Institute of Technology in 1962. Naimoli received a Master of Business Administration degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University in 1964, and attended Harvard Business School's six-week advanced management program in 1974.

Until the end of his life, Naimoli attended Fighting Irish athletic events regularly. Naimoli has three daughters from his first marriage, and one daughter from his second marriage.

Naimoli was a member of the Fairleigh Dickinson University Board of Trustees. The Naimoli Family Baseball Complex on the Metropolitan Campus of Fairleigh Dickinson University was dedicated on October 5, 2011.

The regions of Tampa and St. Peterberg had made a push for baseball for many years, ranging from trying to relocate the Chicago White Sox to a failed push for the 1991 expansion bids. In 1990, the Florida Suncoast Dome opened. As such, Naimoli, leader of the Tampa Bay Baseball Group, had originally tried to bring baseball to the region by buying the San Francisco Giants from Bob Lurie for $115 million that would play in the region in 1993. However, the move failed when the National League forced Lurie to try to find a local buyer, which they narrowly did with Peter Magowan for $100 million. He tried to buy the Seattle Mariners and move them to Tampa, but also failed.

On March 20, 1995, Naimoli became the owner of a new expansion team granted by Major League Baseball for play in the 1998 season, which became christened as the Tampa Bay Devil Rays after originally thinking about naming them the Sting Rays before finding out a winter league team had the name. He hired Chuck LaMar as general manager and Larry Rothschild as the first manager.

Naimoli negotiated a naming-rights deal with Tropicana Products for Tropicana Field, with the team paying for improvements to the stadium and other auxiliary facilities. Naimoli oversaw a design for the stadium with asymmetrical outfield dimensions and dirt base paths, and seats located close to the field of play. FieldTurf was added before the start of the 2000 season. The team was a perpetual failure on the field, never winning 80 games in any season with Naimoli as owner. He owned the team until he sold it to a group led by Stuart Sternberg in 2004 and then stepped down after the 2005 season ended. The team rebranded to Rays in 2008 and promptly had their first winning season.

Naimoli was known for running the Rays very cheaply. He refused to purchase internet access and an email system for the Rays to keep costs down, as he felt email was a fad. His thriftiness also manifested itself via a strict ban on outside food at Tropicana Field. This caused a furor when an elderly woman with diabetes was prevented from bringing food into the park to regulate her sugar levels. As a result, the woman had to sit in her tour bus for the duration of the game.

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American baseball executive (1937–2019)
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