Crain's Cleveland Business

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CRAIN’S LIST: Northeast Ohio’s largest commercial contractors. PAGE 18

REAL ESTATE Rising costs, interest rates combine to muddy the real estate outlook. PAGE 3

CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I APRIL 18, 2022

PHOTOS BY JASON MILLER/PIXELATE PHOTOGRAPHY

COURTESY

The 2022 Eight Over 80 honorees have not only left a legacy, but continue to build on it. PAGE 10

Goodyear Ventures seeks more than financial return

Tiremaker looks to establish strategic relationships BY DAN SHINGLER

The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. has been buying more companies than most people might realize. While it might not be buying them outright, it’s taken venture capital stakes in a dozen fledgling companies over about the last two years through Goodyear Ventures, an investment fund the company founded in 2020 and seeded with $100 million. Unlike most venture capitalists, Goodyear’s not strictly concerned about getting a direct return on its investment via a sale of its portfolio companies, or by them going public. Instead, Goodyear is investing to establish strategic relationships and gain expertise in the fields of mobility and autonomous vehicles, sectors the big Akron tiremaker believes are the keys to its future success and in which it already has invested millions itself. “The intention of kicking this fund off was that Goodyear has really

sworn to strategic relationships with startups that will help us learn about mobility trends and also bring the best of Goodyear to those startups to help them with their growth,” said Goodyear Ventures managing director Abhijit Ganguly.

Focus on partnerships Goodyear has mostly stuck to the themes of mobility and autonomous vehicles. But even within those, Goodyear has found opportunities with young companies involved in a variety of technologies and applications. Goodyear Ventures’ most recent investment is in Seattle-based Recurrent, a company involved in the analysis of electric-vehicle battery health that announced a funding round of $4.5 million in which Goodyear Ventures was one of several participants that Recurrent said would provide not only capital, but “noteworthy partnerships.” See GOODYEAR on Page 20

NEWSPAPER

VOL. 43, NO. 15 l COPYRIGHT 2022 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Len Komoroski, the CEO of the Cleveland Cavaliers, Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse and Rock Entertainment Group, will step away from that role at the end of the Cavs’ season. His career began decades ago as an intern with an indoor soccer team. | CLEVELAND CAVALIERS

Len Komoroski took the road less traveled — and made a difference BY JOE SCALZO

Long before Len Komoroski emerged as one of Cleveland’s most important figures of the last two decades, someone who helped lead the transformation of the Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse and its surrounding neighborhoods, he planned to enter one of the world’s most noble professions. He was going to be a sports writer. The Glenshaw, Pennsylvania, native saw himself becoming the Pittsburgh version of cleveland.com columnist Terry Pluto, someone who

would cover what Howard Cosell was already calling the “City of Champions.” He even dabbled in sports journalism, first teaming up with a future Yinzer media legend named Mark Madden on the North Hill Street Press then as a stringer for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He briefly thought about advertising, and he did a lobbying internship at the Harrisburg Statehouse before an influential professor sold him on the virtues of public relations. By the fall of 1981, as Komoroski entered his senior year at Duquesne University, two things were becoming uncomfortably clear:

 He would need to get a job in eight months.  He didn’t know what he was going to do. Turns out, his future was across the street. Pittsburgh’s Civic Arena was primarily the home to the NHL’s Penguins but also hosted everything from wrestling to roller derby to religious rallies to fish tournament weigh-ins to — most importantly for Komoroski — a Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) team named the Pittsburgh Spirit.

See KOMOROSKI on Page 22


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