Section 101
All-Star
Q: Switching topics on you here. What do you make of the Kings’ potential move to Anaheim and does that excite you in terms of penetrating the market in Sacramento if the Kings leave?
A: I’m just going to wait until I hear the discussion at the Board of Governor’s meeting (on April 14-15). You could argue that it’s a good thing if they left because we’d have all of Northern California, but you could also argue that it’s a bad thing because it sets a precedent for a team moving into another team’s market that they don’t want. The Lakers and Clippers don’t want them (a source says the Board of Governor’s vote for the extension of the March 1 relocation deadline was 27-2, with the Lakers and Clippers the only dissenting votes).
Q: The whole story did make me think of you, because the San Jose discussion is out there.
A: It’s out there, but I don’t think it’s ever likely to happen.
Q: The league has definitively told me that there are no territorial rights, but I’ve heard you talk about them. What’s your understanding of that?
A: There are territorial rights. Seventy-five miles. The issue is they can be overturned by the majority vote of the owners.
Q: The league says otherwise.
A: That’s not true. There’s a 75-mile rule. That’s the fact, but it can be overturned so you decide how you want to refer to that. We just paid the largest price ever paid nominally for a team, and for us to have a (he pauses). First of all, why would anyone want to do it? Anyone who’s smart wouldn’t want to pay a huge number - and it would be a huge number - to go put a team in San Jose and have now half the market. Why would you do that? And if you’re the people who bid before, as an example, why would you pay all that money when you could’ve just bought the Warriors. - or half the Warriors.
I would not pay the price I paid, and say I was going to share the Bay Area market with someone. No way.
Q: Where does your TV rights deal rank?
A: I renegotiated my local media rights. We have a deal that now matches the size of the market. We’re the sixth largest market, and I think we’re roughly the sixth-largest team (in terms of TV rights).
Read more: Q&A with Warriors owner Joe Lacob
Tune to SportsNet Central at 6, 10:30 and midnight on Comcast SportsNet Bay Area for more on this story
A: I’m just going to wait until I hear the discussion at the Board of Governor’s meeting (on April 14-15). You could argue that it’s a good thing if they left because we’d have all of Northern California, but you could also argue that it’s a bad thing because it sets a precedent for a team moving into another team’s market that they don’t want. The Lakers and Clippers don’t want them (a source says the Board of Governor’s vote for the extension of the March 1 relocation deadline was 27-2, with the Lakers and Clippers the only dissenting votes).
Q: The whole story did make me think of you, because the San Jose discussion is out there.
A: It’s out there, but I don’t think it’s ever likely to happen.
Q: The league has definitively told me that there are no territorial rights, but I’ve heard you talk about them. What’s your understanding of that?
A: There are territorial rights. Seventy-five miles. The issue is they can be overturned by the majority vote of the owners.
Q: The league says otherwise.
A: That’s not true. There’s a 75-mile rule. That’s the fact, but it can be overturned so you decide how you want to refer to that. We just paid the largest price ever paid nominally for a team, and for us to have a (he pauses). First of all, why would anyone want to do it? Anyone who’s smart wouldn’t want to pay a huge number - and it would be a huge number - to go put a team in San Jose and have now half the market. Why would you do that? And if you’re the people who bid before, as an example, why would you pay all that money when you could’ve just bought the Warriors. - or half the Warriors.
I would not pay the price I paid, and say I was going to share the Bay Area market with someone. No way.
Q: Where does your TV rights deal rank?
A: I renegotiated my local media rights. We have a deal that now matches the size of the market. We’re the sixth largest market, and I think we’re roughly the sixth-largest team (in terms of TV rights).
Read more: Q&A with Warriors owner Joe Lacob
Tune to SportsNet Central at 6, 10:30 and midnight on Comcast SportsNet Bay Area for more on this story