'Daniel Reid Topping' (
June 11 1912 -
May 18 1974) was a part owner and president of the
New York Yankees baseball team from 1945 to 1964. Topping, along with
Del Webb and
Larry MacPhail, purchased the Yankees for $2.8 million from the estate of the late
Jacob Ruppert on
January 25,
1945. MacPhail sold his share of the team to Topping and Webb in 1947, and the two sold controlling interest in the team to CBS in
1964, after which Topping remained as team president until 1966, when he sold his remaining stake in the Yankees.
Topping also was an owner of the
National Football League's
Brooklyn Dodgers starting in 1931, eventually owning the team outright. By the mid-1940s, Topping wished to move his football team from
Ebbets Field into the newer and larger
Yankee Stadium.
Tim Mara, owner of the
New York Giants, who played in the
Polo Grounds, held NFL territorial rights, and refused to permit this. Not to be denied, Topping moved his team anyway, joining the newly formed All-America Football Conference. Topping's team retained most of its players during the jump and became the football
New York Yankees. The team was not one of the AAFC teams admitted to the NFL in 1950, and folded.
Topping was married to Olympic champion
Sonja Henie from 1940 to 1946, one of his five marriages. He died of complications from a lung ailment in
Miami Beach, Florida at age 61.