Sonics fans are now pinning their hopes on the NBA allowing Hansen to buy the team in Sacramento, trying "earnestly" to get an arena deal done and then moving it. I think they see some poetic justice in the notion of stealing a team the way Bennett did to them. The rationale being that Hansen has a binding agreement with the Maloofs and while the NBA might have cause to deny relocation, they have no reason to deny the H/B/N ownership group.
But it is a grasping at straws approach. Relocation has been recommended against and will be voted down. So binding agreement or not, the fact remains that the Sacramento group has an agreement on a new arena and the Hansen group does not.
I honestly think the only questions now are whether the NBA expands (or promises expansion) and if the H/B/N group sues.
And quite honestly, for everyone saying that they should "play nice" with the NBA and that if they sue they'll never get a team, I honestly disagree. What does Seattle have to lose? They were giving a wink and an nod in 2008 when the Sonics left that if they went along and did things right they'd get a team back at some point. If the NBA doesn't promise expansion now, then what would they have to lose by suing? Nothing. They have no team now, and I don't see one becoming available to move any time soon.
Without expansion this will get messy. But I think the Kings will be out of this drama in a few weeks and it will be up to H/B/N and the NBA/BOG to sort it out.
But it is a grasping at straws approach. Relocation has been recommended against and will be voted down. So binding agreement or not, the fact remains that the Sacramento group has an agreement on a new arena and the Hansen group does not.
I honestly think the only questions now are whether the NBA expands (or promises expansion) and if the H/B/N group sues.
And quite honestly, for everyone saying that they should "play nice" with the NBA and that if they sue they'll never get a team, I honestly disagree. What does Seattle have to lose? They were giving a wink and an nod in 2008 when the Sonics left that if they went along and did things right they'd get a team back at some point. If the NBA doesn't promise expansion now, then what would they have to lose by suing? Nothing. They have no team now, and I don't see one becoming available to move any time soon.
Without expansion this will get messy. But I think the Kings will be out of this drama in a few weeks and it will be up to H/B/N and the NBA/BOG to sort it out.
Actually I could envision a situation where Hansen purchases the Kings but works with the NBA to sort out the arena deal over the course of the year to make sure it goes smoothly, turns around and sells to Ranadive, and is then rewarded with an expansion team. Perhaps the expansion team price meets the valuation of the Ranadive group so that Hansen doesn't actually lose money. This is a potential reasoning for Hansen continuing to pursue his original plan.
Hansen/Ballmer aren't going away, there is the potential for an anti-trust suit (which contrary to belief, US law doesn't prescribe to signing away an anti-trust suit upon purchase of an asset like an NBA franchise). Even if Ballmer/Hansen can't win, a lengthy litigation process will really be bad for the NBA, exposing information that the league doesn't want to be made public. Whatever anyone thinks of him, Ballmer is a serious heavyweight who has the financial muscle and legal experience to go the distance against the league.
The league made up their mind that the Kings franchise will stay in Sacramento, however Hansen/Ballmer aren't going away. They've sunk $100 million into this project, have no reason to back down, and with no other available teams out there, there is nothing the NBA can really do to make them go away. If they continue aggressively, the league will likely have to reward an expansion team or risk a lengthy, ugly litigation. As of now, the NBA can't say "sue us and you'll never get basketball back in the Northwest" because there won't be anything available on the market for Seattle for at least 5 maybe 10 years minimum, plus I think Seattle will actually not want the NBA back if this process ultimately results in nothing for the region. There really is nothing to lose from Hansen (except the already spent $100 million, which will be lost anyway if he just backs off), so ultimately Hansen and Ballmer have a lot more motivation to see this through than the league does. If this ends up being a game of chicken between Hansen/Ballmer vs. Stern/NBA, I think Stern/NBA back off. The league could easily solve this whole problem tomorrow by rewarding Seattle an expansion team, and thats why I think the ultimate result (however the process might be over the coming months) will be an expansion team, somehow.
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