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A AL LL LA AN N H H. .

( (B BU UD D) ) S SE EL LI IG G
C CO OM MM MI IS SS SI IO ON NE ER R O OF F M MA AJ JO OR R L LE EA AG GU UE E B BA AS SE EB BA AL LL L

Allan H. (Bud) Selig was named the ninth Commissioner of Baseball on July 9, 1998, by a unanimous
vote of the 30 Major League Baseball club owners. Prior to his election as Baseballs Commissioner, Selig
served as Chairman of the Executive Council and has been the central figure in Major League Baseballs
organizational structure dating back to September 9, 1992.

Selig has led the way toward implementation of many of the games structural changes, including the
expanded Wild Card Postseason format, Interleague Play, realignment, restoration of the rulebook strike
zone, consolidation of the leagues administrative functions and instant replay, which will be available for
most types of plays in 2014.

In August 2002, Selig engineered an historic labor agreement with the Major League Baseball Players
Association that avoided a work stoppage for the first time in 30 years and included meaningful revenue
sharing among the clubs. In October 2006 and again in November 2011, MLB and the MLBPA continued
the unprecedented era of labor peace by reaching new five-year collective bargaining agreements. By the end
of the current agreement, baseball will have gone at least 21 years without a strike or a lockout, the longest
period of uninterrupted play since the inception of the collective bargaining relationship.

The significant changes to baseballs economic system have helped the sport achieve competitive balance,
made evident by many developments, including nine different Clubs winning the last 13 World Series and 26
different Clubs participating in the Postseason over the last 10 years. From 2000-2009, MLB produced eight
different World Series Champions, which exceeded the comparable figures of the other major American professional sports during the decade, and 14
different Clubs earned the 20 available slots in the Fall Classic in the 10 years, which was also unsurpassed among the results of the other leagues.

In November 2005, MLB and the MLBPA announced an historic agreement to fortify its drug testing policy, making it the most comprehensive in
professional sports and highlighting Seligs long-term efforts to try to rid the game of illegal steroids and other performance-enhancing substances. In
July 2010, MLB became the first U.S. professional sports league to conduct blood testing for the detection of Human Growth Hormone (hGH) with
the start of testing among Minor League players. In November 2011, the program became a part of MLBs collective bargaining agreement with the
MLBPA, making baseball the first North American professional sport to adopt such testing. On January 10, 2013, MLB and the MLBPA jointly
announced unprecedented anti-doping steps in American professional sports with the addition of unannounced, random blood testing for hGH during the
regular season. The pact also included the establishment of a longitudinal profile program. On March 28, 2014, MLB and the MLBPA further solidified
the most comprehensive program in American professional sports.

Selig has expanded the reach of the sport in numerous ways. Under his guidance in January 2000, MLB took the unprecedented step of centralizing
all of the sports Internet rights under MLB Advanced Media. On January 1, 2009, MLB Network launched as the largest debut in cable television
history. In 2006, 2009 and 2013, MLB and the MLBPA staged the World Baseball Classic, the most important international baseball event ever
ventured, in which Major League players competed for their home countries for the first time.

Selig is guiding the game through a significant renaissance. Major League Baseball set its all-time regular season attendance record each year from 2004-
2007, culminating in an all-time high of 79,503,175 fans in 2007. The 2008 season marked the second highest attendance total in history with more than
78.6 million fans. With more than 73 million fans again each year from 2009-2013, the last decade includes all 10 of the best-attended seasons in baseball
history. Revenues have increased more than five-fold, from $1.2 billion in 1992 to a record total exceeding $8.0 billion in 2013.

Selig received many significant honors for his accomplishments, philanthropy and corporate citizenship in recent years. In March 2010, the Jackie
Robinson Foundation, which aids academically distinguished minority students, presented him its Lifetime Achievement Award. In May 2010, the
Taylor Hooton Foundation bestowed its inaugural Taylors Award to Selig for his impact on educating American youth on the dangers of
performance-enhancing drugs. In August 2010, the Milwaukee Brewers unveiled a statue in Seligs likeness outside Miller Park, honoring all of his
efforts for his hometown and for his leadership of the Brewers and the game of baseball. In September 2010, Stand Up To Cancer, dedicated to
groundbreaking translational research in the fight against cancer, made its first Named Innovative Research Grant in honor of Allan H. Selig and his
wife, Suzanne L. Selig, for spearheading MLBs remarkable industry-wide support. In August 2011, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
unveiled the Allan H. (Bud) Selig Center for the Archives of Major League Baseball Commissioners, a permanent research space within the halls of
Cooperstown, dedicated in his honor. In September 2012, the Green Sports Alliance presented its first Environmental Leadership Award to Selig; the
Natural Resources Defense Council called Selig the single most influential environmental advocate in the history of sports. In June 2013, the
Commissioner was the recipient of Bnai Brith Internationals Distinguished Humanitarian Award. In June 2014, Boys & Girls Clubs of America
presented Selig with its Chairmans Award at the organizations Great Futures Gala.

Selig is a major supporter of his alma mater, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as well as Marquette University. The University of Wisconsin has
named several need-based scholarships and a history department chair in Seligs honor. Selig, who has taught at Marquette University Law School
since 2009, was named to its adjunct faculty as distinguished lecturer in sports law and policy in 2010.

Bud and Sue have three daughters and five granddaughters.

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