EmKingsFan4
Starter
Mark Kreidler: City, Kings playing arena card game
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PDT Saturday, April 16, 2005
Just now, I think we all can agree, is no time to panic.
One year ago - that would've been a great time to panic.
You want to start worrying over whether the Kings might someday leave Sacramento? Take a ticket and stand in line. Beyond the bluster, beyond the buffoonery and beyond the button-busting credos of local pride - We Don't Need No NBA Team to Validate Our Existence - there have been thinking people mulling that very scenario for some time.
They've been mulling it through Sacramento's explosive failures of civic leadership and the area's inability to get together on a single, supportable position regarding the construction of a new sports arena. They mulled it when the Maloofs, furious at being sandbagged by a last-minute city spending cap, walked out of the City Council meeting last year, and again when the developer-led deal out in North Natomas cratered a few months back.
Now comes Friday's word that the Maloofs are part and parcel of a bid by Las Vegas to host the 2007 NBA All-Star Game, and it has indeed succeeded in setting the cluckers to clucking. On the surface, it's no wonder.
The Maloofs own the Kings. The Maloofs are beginning to own Vegas. The Maloofs can't get a new arena built for them in Sacramento. The Maloofs start angling for NBA action out in the desert.
"One has nothing to do with the other," Joe Maloof said in a telephone interview Friday afternoon. "Vegas is a perfect place to host the All-Star Game, but the Kings to Vegas - that makes no sense."
Still, the recently panicky might feel free to connect the dots for themselves. Just be sure to use blood instead of ink.
But, look, you only need one sentence to wonder about the Kings' future here, and it's the one about the Maloofs and the arena. It has nothing to do with whether Las Vegas gets to host an All-Star Game someday or really wants a pro team to call its own. Sacramento isn't racing against an opponent at this point.
The math really is this simple: If the Kings and the city - or the county, the area, the developers, whomever happens to be at the switch right now - are unable to settle on terms for a new building for the team, the Maloofs will leave. Today, tomorrow, a couple of years.
They'll leave. They'll leave because they can. They'll leave because someone else will build them the place Sacramento just generally doesn't want to. It could be Vegas. It could be somewhere else.
The Maloofs might root with their hearts, but they do business with their heads. That they can't stay at Arco Arena forever is axiomatic. That Sacramento would have to build a new place sooner or later - for everything, not just for the Kings - is a short-to mid-range certainty.
And all of this conversation, every bit, is separate and apart from the Vegas bid for the All-Star Game, which, frankly, the NBA would be nuts to reject. Vegas is gaudy, rich and in love with theatrics. It's an almost perfect fit with a self-promoting exhibitionist like All-Star Weekend - and it has almost nothing to do with an NBA team relocating there permanently.
(By the way, is it any shock the Maloof family would be involved on the All-Star front? You don't think The Palms, with its wing of hotel beds specially designed for NBA-sized players, would come out of that thing swimming in cash?)
NBA Commissioner David Stern has always resisted the idea of a team in Las Vegas. It's problematic on a thousand fronts, beginning with the bookmaking issue (the All-Star Game is a possibility only because the casinos would agree not to take bets on it) and continuing on through the hundreds of all-night opportunities for the league's young, monied stars to find trouble.
For his part, Joe Maloof doesn't believe the NBA will ever award Vegas a team unless all of its casinos agree to take pro basketball off their betting boards, the longest of longshots. I don't think Stern can fend off Las Vegas forever - like Sacramento, it's one of the most promising growth regions in the West - but we're still years and years away from the NBA even considering a permanent franchise hard by The Strip.
Sacramento's arena minidrama will have played itself to complete exhaustion long before Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman gets his wish for a pro team.
And that brings us back to where we are, which is in the thick middle of it. Somewhat amazingly, considering the sequence of events this week (Kings make unscheduled $12 million payment on city loan; owners suddenly help Las Vegas in All-Star bid), some folks well involved in the arena discussions suggested Friday that another plan for a new place in Sacramento could be forthcoming rather soon.
"I think Angelo is still working on some things," Joe Maloof said, referring to Angelo Tsakopoulos, the well-connected local mega-developer. "Things are creeping along."
Like the previous plans, reasonable people might well disagree on the point of this latest try. There will always be issues, be they of the zoning, environmental or philosophical variety. Some very smart humans whom I admire greatly are adamantly opposed to public funding of an arena to benefit private owners, no matter what the level.
That's fine - so long as everyone understands the rules. The rules are these: (1) Sacramento has every right to refuse to build a shiny new bauble for the Maloofs, citing any number of reasons; (2) The Maloofs, if they can't get here the kind of deal they can get elsewhere, will go ... elsewhere. That is the game, almost entirely. It's the same game the city and the Kings were playing long before Friday. If anyone feels like worrying now, they've got some catching up to do.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12735289p-13587091c.html
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PDT Saturday, April 16, 2005
Just now, I think we all can agree, is no time to panic.
One year ago - that would've been a great time to panic.
You want to start worrying over whether the Kings might someday leave Sacramento? Take a ticket and stand in line. Beyond the bluster, beyond the buffoonery and beyond the button-busting credos of local pride - We Don't Need No NBA Team to Validate Our Existence - there have been thinking people mulling that very scenario for some time.
They've been mulling it through Sacramento's explosive failures of civic leadership and the area's inability to get together on a single, supportable position regarding the construction of a new sports arena. They mulled it when the Maloofs, furious at being sandbagged by a last-minute city spending cap, walked out of the City Council meeting last year, and again when the developer-led deal out in North Natomas cratered a few months back.
Now comes Friday's word that the Maloofs are part and parcel of a bid by Las Vegas to host the 2007 NBA All-Star Game, and it has indeed succeeded in setting the cluckers to clucking. On the surface, it's no wonder.
The Maloofs own the Kings. The Maloofs are beginning to own Vegas. The Maloofs can't get a new arena built for them in Sacramento. The Maloofs start angling for NBA action out in the desert.
"One has nothing to do with the other," Joe Maloof said in a telephone interview Friday afternoon. "Vegas is a perfect place to host the All-Star Game, but the Kings to Vegas - that makes no sense."
Still, the recently panicky might feel free to connect the dots for themselves. Just be sure to use blood instead of ink.
But, look, you only need one sentence to wonder about the Kings' future here, and it's the one about the Maloofs and the arena. It has nothing to do with whether Las Vegas gets to host an All-Star Game someday or really wants a pro team to call its own. Sacramento isn't racing against an opponent at this point.
The math really is this simple: If the Kings and the city - or the county, the area, the developers, whomever happens to be at the switch right now - are unable to settle on terms for a new building for the team, the Maloofs will leave. Today, tomorrow, a couple of years.
They'll leave. They'll leave because they can. They'll leave because someone else will build them the place Sacramento just generally doesn't want to. It could be Vegas. It could be somewhere else.
The Maloofs might root with their hearts, but they do business with their heads. That they can't stay at Arco Arena forever is axiomatic. That Sacramento would have to build a new place sooner or later - for everything, not just for the Kings - is a short-to mid-range certainty.
And all of this conversation, every bit, is separate and apart from the Vegas bid for the All-Star Game, which, frankly, the NBA would be nuts to reject. Vegas is gaudy, rich and in love with theatrics. It's an almost perfect fit with a self-promoting exhibitionist like All-Star Weekend - and it has almost nothing to do with an NBA team relocating there permanently.
(By the way, is it any shock the Maloof family would be involved on the All-Star front? You don't think The Palms, with its wing of hotel beds specially designed for NBA-sized players, would come out of that thing swimming in cash?)
NBA Commissioner David Stern has always resisted the idea of a team in Las Vegas. It's problematic on a thousand fronts, beginning with the bookmaking issue (the All-Star Game is a possibility only because the casinos would agree not to take bets on it) and continuing on through the hundreds of all-night opportunities for the league's young, monied stars to find trouble.
For his part, Joe Maloof doesn't believe the NBA will ever award Vegas a team unless all of its casinos agree to take pro basketball off their betting boards, the longest of longshots. I don't think Stern can fend off Las Vegas forever - like Sacramento, it's one of the most promising growth regions in the West - but we're still years and years away from the NBA even considering a permanent franchise hard by The Strip.
Sacramento's arena minidrama will have played itself to complete exhaustion long before Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman gets his wish for a pro team.
And that brings us back to where we are, which is in the thick middle of it. Somewhat amazingly, considering the sequence of events this week (Kings make unscheduled $12 million payment on city loan; owners suddenly help Las Vegas in All-Star bid), some folks well involved in the arena discussions suggested Friday that another plan for a new place in Sacramento could be forthcoming rather soon.
"I think Angelo is still working on some things," Joe Maloof said, referring to Angelo Tsakopoulos, the well-connected local mega-developer. "Things are creeping along."
Like the previous plans, reasonable people might well disagree on the point of this latest try. There will always be issues, be they of the zoning, environmental or philosophical variety. Some very smart humans whom I admire greatly are adamantly opposed to public funding of an arena to benefit private owners, no matter what the level.
That's fine - so long as everyone understands the rules. The rules are these: (1) Sacramento has every right to refuse to build a shiny new bauble for the Maloofs, citing any number of reasons; (2) The Maloofs, if they can't get here the kind of deal they can get elsewhere, will go ... elsewhere. That is the game, almost entirely. It's the same game the city and the Kings were playing long before Friday. If anyone feels like worrying now, they've got some catching up to do.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12735289p-13587091c.html