slugking50
All-Star
I guess nobody told him about our whales.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8872654/opinion-sacramento-kings-fans-matter
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8872654/opinion-sacramento-kings-fans-matter
ESPN is totally east coast biased, as confirmed by a Sacramento reporter that went to work for them a when the Kings were actually at their peak. She couldn't get anybody back there to pay much attention to the Weber/Divac team. About the only west coast team they paid any attention to was the Lakers. So ESPN is pretty ignorant about the Kings and certainly about Sacramento.
Wow. That article doesnt even mention anything about Burkle or Mastarov. Theyre acknowledging Hansen but not Ron Burkle!? What an embarrassment.
most of us have been clamoring for proper ownership, management, and coaching for many years now. it is not illogical to want a franchise to improve from the top down. that is a fan, after all, who cares so much about his or her favorite team that he or she simply refuses to accept its mediocrity...
The point of the article is still true, though: It doesn't matter what Kings fans think or want. It doesn't matter that we think the Kings were being mismanaged. It's not OUR business and we have no input on it, other than to spend our money on it or not. Our opinion is irrelevant and the decision on whether the Kings stay or go, whether the losing city gets an expansion team, etc., will be made based on one thing: MONEY
The NBA has been extremely successful since the Sonics moved. Moving the Kings will not change that. One fanbase will rise at the expense of another. As far as the NBA is concerned, it's a wash (or an advantage to move since, after all, it's a larger market).
NBA franchise values have risen 30% from last year (as per Forbes). Their product is more profitable than ever, their assets (franchise value) keep rising, and the league continues to be successful. Heck, Forbes now ranks the Kings as the 11th most valuable NBA franchise... in spite of the clowns running it to the ground. MONEY is all that matters.
Fan loyalty? Bah, Humbug.
of course the decision of whether the kings stay or go is based on money. but why are nba franchise values rising? fan loyalty. you can have a great TV deal. you can have expensive box seats for sponsors. but if the fans don't put their asses in the seats, if the fans don't buy the merchandise, if the fans don't care, franchise values drop. the kings hold the top two sellout streaks in the nba. if fan loyalty didn't matter, do you think david stern would have poured so much time, effort, and league resources into helping the city of sacramento draft a working arena deal last year? sacramento is a relatively small market. there are few big time corporate sponsors in the region. there's no gigantic TV deal waiting in the wings. it is and has been a viable nba city because the fans are loyal. they show up even when the kings are terrible. the decision on whether the kings stay or go will not be made by fans, but that loyalty has measurable impact, and i am, indeed, talking about $$$...
I started a long post disputing and arguing most of your points but I stopped halfway through and decided to just go with this:
I'm optimistic that we'll keep our team. It's just as easy as being pessimistic and a lot healthier, at least for me.
Fair enough... I'm hopeful and (very) cautiously optimistic but, given how the Maloofs have screwed us over and over, preparing for the worst.
I don't argue that this is about money. But the article failed to point out that Sacramento has potential a billionaire buyer(s) too. It really failed to point out the financial pluses on Sacramento's side. Made Sacramento sound like some incredibly poor relative who really shouldn't even be a member of the family, but pity them. Really pissed me off.The point of the article is still true, though: It doesn't matter what Kings fans think or want. It doesn't matter that we think the Kings were being mismanaged. It's not OUR business and we have no input on it, other than to spend our money on it or not. Our opinion is irrelevant and the decision on whether the Kings stay or go, whether the losing city gets an expansion team, etc., will be made based on one thing: MONEY
You are so eloquent and right on the factual money. Thank you.I can understand that.
But there are a lot of reasons for hope.
One is that the NBA blocked the sale of the T'Wolves when it would have meant moving them.
Another is that Kevin Johnson is a fighter and a good one.
But the biggest one for me is that the NBA worked hand in hand with Sacramento to get an arena deal, and KJ held up his side of it by getting public funding. That can't be overstated. I feel for Sonics fans who lost their team, but Seattle did NOT partner with the NBA on a new arena or a remodel of Key Arena. This would be a far worse situation than when the NBA allowed the Sonics to move, and would cause enormous financial harm to a city that did everything asked of it.
And what Keown doesn't get at all in his article is that the fundamental reason why Sacramento will fight so hard to keep the Kings is precisely because we (fans) DO love them.