Forbes announced its annual list of the world’s 50 most valuable sports teams Wednesday and, as usual, Dallas was near the top of the list; just after the usual soccer suspects and MLB’s New York Yankees.
Twenty-nine other NFL teams cracked the list, too, with the Jacksonville Jaguars and Oakland Raiders not quite making the cut. Here they are, based on their overall rank, including each team’s worth:
Dallas Cowboys (owned by Jones), $2.3 billion
New England Patriots (Robert Kraft), $1.8 billion
Washington Redskins (Daniel Snyder), $1.7 billion
New York Giants (John Mara, Steve Tisch), $1.55 billion
Houston Texans (Bob McNair), $1.45 billion
New York Jets (Woody Johnson), $1.38 billion
Philadelphia Eagles (Jeffrey Lurie), $1.314 billion
Chicago Bears (McCaskey family), $1.252 billion
Baltimore Ravens (Steve Bisciotti), $1.227 billion
San Francisco 49ers (Denise DeBartolo York, John York), $1.224 billion
Indianapolis Colts (Jim Irasay), $1.2 billion
Green Bay Packers (shareholders), $1.183 billion
Denver Broncos (Pat Bowlen), $1.161 billion
Pittsburgh Steelers (Dan Rooney, Art Rooney II), $1.118 billion
Seattle Seahawks (Paul Allen), $1.081 billion
Miami Dolphins (Stephen Ross), $1.074 billion
Tampa Bay Buccaeeners (Glazer family), $1.067 billion
Carolina Panthers (Jerry Richardson, Carolina PSLFC), $1.057 billion
Tennessee Titans (Kenneth Adams family), $1.055 billion
Kansas City Chiefs (Lamar Hunt family), $1.009 billion
Minnesota Vikings (Zygi Wilf), $1.007 billion
Cleveland Browns (Jimmy Haslam, Randolph Lerner), $1.005 billion
New Orleans Saints (Tom Benson, Rita Benson LeBlanc), $1.004 billion
Arizona Cardinals (Bill Bidwill), $961 million
San Diego Chargers (Spanos family), $949 million
Atlanta Falcons (Arthur Blank), $933 million
Cincinnati Bengals (Mike Brown), $924 million
Detroit Lions (William Clay Ford), $900 million
St. Louis Rams (Stan Kroenke), $875 million
Buffalo Bills (Ralph Wilson trust), $870 million