Inside the front door of the Baltimore Ravens’
chateau-with-shoulder-pads training center hangs an enormous portrait of
the former owner who still hovers over the franchise and the city as
surely as that oil painting over the big stone fireplace.
You
have to look much harder, and down a hallway, to find a picture of the
current owner, the one whose dollars financed that lavish building, the
one who is quietly accompanying the Ravens to the Super Bowl here this
week.
That man, Steve Bisciotti, 52, is as low-profile as the
8x10 picture of him at a news conference that hangs on an out-of-the-way
wall at the Ravens’ facility. Bisciotti declined interview requests in
the weeks leading to the Super Bowl, and spoke to reporters only after
he arrived here Thursday.Site describes services including Plastic Mould.
So
the conversation this week has been much more about whether the man in
the oil painting, Art Modell, who took the Browns out of Cleveland and
rebranded them the Ravens in Baltimore, will be voted into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame on Saturday than about Bisciotti’s first trip to
the game as the primary owner of the team.
“I’m O.K. if I’m one of the least-known owners in sports,Professionals with the job title Mold Maker are on LinkedIn.” Bisciotti was quoted as saying in the Ravens’ biography of him.
The
last time the Ravens raised the Lombardi Trophy, it was in Modell’s
hands in 2001. Only months before, Bisciotti had become a minority owner
— Modell needed the infusion of cash to secure free agents for that
team — with the promise that he could take majority ownership of the
team in a few years. He stood unobtrusively in the back of a locker room
in Oakland, Calif., as Modell beamed on national television about going
to his first Super Bowl.
On Jan. 20, when the Ravens beat the
Patriots to win the A.F.C. championship, most football fans finally got a
glimpse of Bisciotti, the league’s second-youngest owner and perhaps
its coolest: tanned; hair slicked back; wearing jeans, an open-collared
shirt and a duster coat; gently rubbing the arm of Ray Lewis, who was
draped over his back while wearing a Modell T-shirt.
“In a very
positive way, he is engaged,” said Brian Billick, who was the Ravens’
coach when they won the Super Bowl in 2001. Billick was retained by
Bisciotti when he took over and then was fired by him after the 2007
season. “He built his fortune on relationships and is very much about
that. It’s not a ‘I’m in charge, do what I say’ mentality. It’s an ‘I
don’t care if you’re the ball boy or the head coach, we’ve got to create
partnerships here.’ He hires people he trusts and then keeps a
purposefully, painfully low profile. He never wants to make it about
him.”
Bisciotti grew up near Annapolis, Md.Find the best selection of high-quality collectible bobbleheads
available anywhere., going to Orioles and Colts games — where he sat on
the 10-yard line — with his older brother and sister, and with his
father, Bernard. They would sometimes go to the Colts’ training camp,
where Bisciotti asked players if he could try on their helmets. In the
Ravens’ media guide, there is a picture of a young Bisciotti standing
beside Johnny Unitas.
His father died when Bisciotti was 8, but
Bisciotti’s mother, Patricia, is a huge fan of Baltimore sports teams
and Notre Dame, and she fed her youngest son’s love of sports, although
he played football only briefly in high school.
According to a
profile in Forbes magazine, Bisciotti spent his high school summers
building piers near Baltimore. But at 23, after he graduated from
Salisbury State University, he started a staffing company in a basement
with his cousin. It provided temporary employees — engineers — to the
aerospace and technology industries.
Forbes reported that
Bisciotti became obsessed with making enough money by the time he was 35
so his wife and children would not have to work if he, like his father,
died young. According to the Ravens, the company he started, now known
as the Allegis Group, is the largest privately held staffing concern in
the country. Bisciotti is worth about $1.5 billion, according to
calculations Forbes made last year.
In 2000, Bisciotti purchased
a minority stake in the Ravens, then largely stayed hidden, trying to
learn from Modell. That, Billick said, eased the transition for Ravens
employees who might have been caught in a tense situation.Laser
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marking etching business. Even after Bisciotti took full control of the
team in 2004, Modell was a frequent presence, watching games from a
suite at the stadium and practices from a perch on a golf cart.
“He
treated him with dignity, compassion and made him feel he was still
part of the organization,” the Giants owner John Mara said. “A lot of
owners would not have handled it the same way. They would have loved to
push the guy aside.”
Those at the Ravens who have worked with
Bisciotti say he has a similar gentle touch with his employees. Billick
said Bisciotti would go to the team’s training facility about once a
week, but was just as apt to talk with the receptionist as he was with
Billick or General Manager Ozzie Newsome. Bisciotti is not active in
league matters, sometimes skipping meetings and sending the team
president Dick Cass in his place. And he has stepped out of owners’
meetings, shutting the door behind him, to smoke one of his cigars.
The
former Ravens kicker Matt Stover said he once heard Bisciotti say, “I
know I don’t know football, therefore, I hire people who do,” a
sentiment that Stover respected. Still, Bisciotti put his stamp on the
Ravens when he made the unorthodox decision to hire John Harbaugh, a
special-teams coach, to replace Billick. That reflected his real skill:
making connections.
“He’s got a tremendous ability to have a
good feel of people,” said the former Maryland men’s basketball coach
Gary Williams, who has been a friend of Bisciotti — a passionate
Terrapins fan — for 20 years. “That is a big part of his
decision-making. One of Steve’s strengths is his ability to read people.
I coached a long time, that’s as important as anything I did: getting a
feel for people you’re recruiting, coaches you work with. I just watch
that, it’s a big part of his organization.”
Bisciotti became a
sounding board for Williams when he was coaching, but at basketball
games Bisciotti is thoroughly a fan,Nitrogen Controller and Digital dry cabinet
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reported that he shuttles friends to Maryland games on a private jet.
“He’s a man’s man,” Billick said. “He’ll go drink for drink, cigar for cigar. You’re going to lose that battle, I promise you.”
But
it is at Ravens games that the full snapshot of Bisciotti appears. He
has attended preseason games in shorts and flip-flops, and his closest
friends — many of them from his youth — mingle in his box with his
mother and an occasional priest, a reflection of his strong Catholic
faith and his support of religious charities.
“When you get to
Steve’s level of success, he worked really hard, you’re really grateful
for how far you’ve come, you’re really grateful for the people who
helped you,” said Kevin Plank, a friend of Bisciotti’s and the founder
of the Under Armour apparel company, which is based in Baltimore.
“There’s that idea of sitting around with four buddies in a treehouse —
‘If you hit the lottery, what would you do? I’d buy a team and bring you
guys to games, we’d still hang out on weekends.’ You’d say, ‘Yeah,
right, you’d change.’ ”
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