Sure, but that's what I was getting at. They can get the money from the league, avoid ever going into the red for owning the Kings by spending the revenue sharing money to make up any shortfalls, and hang onto the team with the Kings not generating any financial pressure on them to sell. Meanwhile historically NBA franchises have been assets which have appreciated dramtically thorugh the years, although you would have to think there's a cap to that somewhere out there.
Just as big, I think people forget, or more likely WANT to forget just how important the Kings are to the Maloofs emotionally. This was never a business decision. Remember they grew up with their dad owning a team, and considered him selling it to be the biggest mistake of his career. They wanted one back the way a kid who never got that bicycle keeps on dreaming of getting one once he grows up and has money of his own. Then they get the team, get all kinds of press and fame, start appearing in rap videos with silcon enhanced hoties hanign on their arms in biknis etc. And now people expect them to give all that up and just go back to being random rich schmoes? These guys are dumb and shallow and grew up spoiled. They already lost their casino toy, hell if they are going to lose their sports toy and repeat their dad's mistake. Its like expecting a guy who grew up surfing and goes out every day to willingly move to Nebraska because property values are cheaper and its the smart financial move.
Like I say, outside financial pressures could force them to sell. If they are somehow bleeding so much money outside of the NBA that they need the Kings to generate lots of revenue outflow to keep them afloat, that can't happen becuase of the rules on the uses of revenue sharing. But I'm not sure what would be draining them like that anymore, because they don' town anything anymore. As far as I know just some Wells Fargo stock, a basketball team that probably breaks even with a little help from the other owners, and some random reality TV/skateboarding type of nonsense entertainment stuff down in L.A. They remain relelvant only so long as they keep the Kings, and in some ways the depth of their financial disaster is concealed. If they sell the Kings, by the time they get done paying off all the associated debts they walk away with less than $100mil, in dramatically lessened cirucmstances, and with no reasonable hope of ever being able to re-reverse their dad's mistake and buy back in again.