http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/71623.html
Ailene Voisin: Defeat won't lead to doom
Last Updated 12:03 am PST Saturday, November 4, 2006
Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1
So let's assume Measures Q and R bomb at the ballot box Tuesday. What happens next?
Everyone goes home angry. Then everyone realizes the sun still rises, the Kings are still here, and the Maloofs and the NBA are refusing to abandon Sacramento for a variety of reasons, among them unwavering support, lack of competition and, at the moment, no superior alternatives elsewhere. Then, finally, the parties will cease their whining, submerge their egos and return to the table.
"The Maloofs are absolutely, positively committed to staying in Sacramento," an irritated NBA Commissioner David Stern said Friday in a brief telephone conversation. "I don't know how to say it more strongly than that. After the election, we have to see if this deal can be salvaged, and if not, look at something else."
Count Stern among the mad. The Maloofs feel duped by city/county officials. City/county officials feel strong-armed by the Maloofs. Kings fans feel caught in the vise between the dueling parties. And the commissioner -- asked on several occasions by city/county officials to intervene and break the frequent impasses -- believes these same politicians failed to fulfill their promise and assist in the Maloofs' attempts to acquire adequate parking spaces and additional concessions from Stan Thomas, the developer with the option to purchase the land and renovate the railyard.
Additionally, Stern contends Joe Maloof was unjustifiably castigated when he abruptly announced that there was no deal, and that other significant issues for a downtown site remained unresolved, among them toxic waste problems and infrastrucure funding.
"Joe was just being straight with voters," Stern insisted, concurring with Joe Maloof's suggestion that Natomas remains a viable option. "He didn't deserve the beating he took."
But this isn't over.
See you at the polls in 2008.
Meantime, it's back to the negotiations, though before any future deal can be consummated, a few things have to occur. First, the acrimony among the principals must abate, with the element of trust and a legitimate sense of partnership emerging. Secondly, Joe Maloof, who remains arguably the most important figure here, must move back into his home off Garden Highway and re-establish roots (and goodwill) within the community. His personal investment during the family's first years of ownership was worth millions. Heck, back then, those burger ads would have been praised around here as the junk food that binds the rich and the poor.
The Maloofs, by my account, made two gaffes. They failed to hire an effective personal adviser, and they did a terrible job articulating their very legitimate need for a modern facility and a private/public partnership. They virtually ignored their biggest ally -- NBA economics.
Sacramento is not Los Angeles, Chicago or New York, where corporations and huge regional television contracts essentially pay the bills and ensure profits. The NBA small-market landscape, frankly, has become a financial mess. Owners are jumping ship, if not off bridges, primarily because their arena lease agreements fail to provide adequate profits from parking, food, club seats, and the other amenities and revenue streams so plentiful in the larger cities.
Seattle SuperSonics owner Howard Schultz of Starbucks fame bailed after five seasons. Memphis Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley is selling after a similarly short tenure. Portland owner Paul Allen is threatening to sell unless the Trail Blazers' lease is revised. Milwaukee owner Herb Kohl, a U.S. senator, is rumored to be selling the Bucks after his expected re-election next week. Bradley Center was built the same year as Arco (1988), and as the league's second-oldest facility, is plagued by several of the same issues and an even more problematic lease.
Glen Taylor, whose Timberwolves compete in an ideally located Target Center in downtown Minneapolis, says his club is losing substantial sums because the more modern NHL arena in St. Paul is luring away corporate sponsorships, concerts and other acts.
"In these older buildings," Taylor said recently, "it's getting very hard."
Then there is Orlando. After years of frustration, Magic officials recently agreed to relinquish operation of a new arena to be built as part of a downtown renovation. As one league official said, "In a smaller market, if the owners operate the building, they better control most of the parking and other revenue, or it's a losing proposition."
In that respect, the Maloofs' demands regarding a downtown facility -- which they would operate rather than own, make immense business sense. Whether a deal in the railyard is workable in light of the other issues is another matter.
But back to the future.
The Kings belong here.
Everyone seems in agreement on that.
About the writer: Reach Ailene Voisin at (916) 321-1208 or avoisin@sacbee.com.
Ailene Voisin: Defeat won't lead to doom
Last Updated 12:03 am PST Saturday, November 4, 2006
Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1
So let's assume Measures Q and R bomb at the ballot box Tuesday. What happens next?
Everyone goes home angry. Then everyone realizes the sun still rises, the Kings are still here, and the Maloofs and the NBA are refusing to abandon Sacramento for a variety of reasons, among them unwavering support, lack of competition and, at the moment, no superior alternatives elsewhere. Then, finally, the parties will cease their whining, submerge their egos and return to the table.
"The Maloofs are absolutely, positively committed to staying in Sacramento," an irritated NBA Commissioner David Stern said Friday in a brief telephone conversation. "I don't know how to say it more strongly than that. After the election, we have to see if this deal can be salvaged, and if not, look at something else."
Count Stern among the mad. The Maloofs feel duped by city/county officials. City/county officials feel strong-armed by the Maloofs. Kings fans feel caught in the vise between the dueling parties. And the commissioner -- asked on several occasions by city/county officials to intervene and break the frequent impasses -- believes these same politicians failed to fulfill their promise and assist in the Maloofs' attempts to acquire adequate parking spaces and additional concessions from Stan Thomas, the developer with the option to purchase the land and renovate the railyard.
Additionally, Stern contends Joe Maloof was unjustifiably castigated when he abruptly announced that there was no deal, and that other significant issues for a downtown site remained unresolved, among them toxic waste problems and infrastrucure funding.
"Joe was just being straight with voters," Stern insisted, concurring with Joe Maloof's suggestion that Natomas remains a viable option. "He didn't deserve the beating he took."
But this isn't over.
See you at the polls in 2008.
Meantime, it's back to the negotiations, though before any future deal can be consummated, a few things have to occur. First, the acrimony among the principals must abate, with the element of trust and a legitimate sense of partnership emerging. Secondly, Joe Maloof, who remains arguably the most important figure here, must move back into his home off Garden Highway and re-establish roots (and goodwill) within the community. His personal investment during the family's first years of ownership was worth millions. Heck, back then, those burger ads would have been praised around here as the junk food that binds the rich and the poor.
The Maloofs, by my account, made two gaffes. They failed to hire an effective personal adviser, and they did a terrible job articulating their very legitimate need for a modern facility and a private/public partnership. They virtually ignored their biggest ally -- NBA economics.
Sacramento is not Los Angeles, Chicago or New York, where corporations and huge regional television contracts essentially pay the bills and ensure profits. The NBA small-market landscape, frankly, has become a financial mess. Owners are jumping ship, if not off bridges, primarily because their arena lease agreements fail to provide adequate profits from parking, food, club seats, and the other amenities and revenue streams so plentiful in the larger cities.
Seattle SuperSonics owner Howard Schultz of Starbucks fame bailed after five seasons. Memphis Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley is selling after a similarly short tenure. Portland owner Paul Allen is threatening to sell unless the Trail Blazers' lease is revised. Milwaukee owner Herb Kohl, a U.S. senator, is rumored to be selling the Bucks after his expected re-election next week. Bradley Center was built the same year as Arco (1988), and as the league's second-oldest facility, is plagued by several of the same issues and an even more problematic lease.
Glen Taylor, whose Timberwolves compete in an ideally located Target Center in downtown Minneapolis, says his club is losing substantial sums because the more modern NHL arena in St. Paul is luring away corporate sponsorships, concerts and other acts.
"In these older buildings," Taylor said recently, "it's getting very hard."
Then there is Orlando. After years of frustration, Magic officials recently agreed to relinquish operation of a new arena to be built as part of a downtown renovation. As one league official said, "In a smaller market, if the owners operate the building, they better control most of the parking and other revenue, or it's a losing proposition."
In that respect, the Maloofs' demands regarding a downtown facility -- which they would operate rather than own, make immense business sense. Whether a deal in the railyard is workable in light of the other issues is another matter.
But back to the future.
The Kings belong here.
Everyone seems in agreement on that.
About the writer: Reach Ailene Voisin at (916) 321-1208 or avoisin@sacbee.com.