Sacramento mayor to Seattle: 'Don't celebrate too early'
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson had a stern warning for Seattle SuperSonics fans who are excited about the prospect of the NBA returning to the Puget Sound next season.
"Don't celebrate too early," he said.
In front of a cheering City Hall crowd filled with fans and public officials Tuesday, Johnson introduced the first part of his four-step plan to keep the Sacramento Kings in California's capital city.
The three-time NBA All-Star turned mayor unveiled 19 local investors who have pledged at least $1 million each to be part of a group that would buy the franchise. Johnson said the major partner he hopes will anchor the last-ditch deal to keep the Kings from moving to Seattle will be revealed as soon as this week.
"We've been here before," Johnson said. "Our backs have been against the wall. They told us it wasn't going to happen. But each and every step along the way, as long as there is time on the clock, our community always finds a way to stand up for itself."
Unlike the last two years, Sacramento is up against a group that already has signed agreements to acquire the Kings and build a new arena for the franchise.
The mayor's announcement came a day after the Maloof family announced a deal to sell the Kings to a Seattle group that includes investor Chris Hansen and Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer. The signed purchase agreement is still pending a vote by the NBA Board of Governors.
The group will buy 65 percent of the franchise, which has a total valuation of $525 million, and move the team to Seattle and restore the SuperSonics name, a person familiar with the decision has said. That means the group will pay a little more than $340 million.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal is waiting to be approved. Hansen's group also is hoping to buy out other minority investors.
The main stipulation Johnson is counting on is that the Maloofs are still allowed to receive other offers until the league approves the sale, which the mayor expects to take until at least April, when owners meet in New York. The deadline for teams to file for relocation for next season is March 1, though that has been extended the last two years for the Kings.
Johnson said he has spoken with more than one heavy-hitting investor to back the plan and produce a "fair and competitive offer" to the NBA. He also said prominent Sacramento-area lawyers have offered to work pro bono for the city's cause.
"I just say to the fans in Seattle: be cautiously optimistic. Be smart. But this isn't about our city against their city, or one mayor against another mayor," Johnson said. "We have something that's ours and we want to keep it, and we're going to do everything we can to make Sacramento the final resting place of the Sacramento Kings."
The final three phases of the mayor's "Playing to Win" plan are finding the major financer to compete with the Seattle group's offer, demonstrating the city's commitment to a new downtown arena and showing the strength of the Sacramento market. None of those crucial pieces have been announced.
Some of the 19 proposed minority investors, two of whom Johnson said chose to remain anonymous, stood next to the mayor and spoke about why they agreed to non-binding pledges.
The group includes developer David Taylor, who backed a plan to build a $391 million arena in downtown Sacramento before the deal collapsed last year; Phil Oates, a developer and the son of Sacramento-area real estate pioneer Marvin "Buzz" Oates; and Kevin Nagle, a business executive and co-owner of the Town Center who helped increase Sacramento sponsorship and season-ticket sales when the Kings explored a move to Anaheim two years ago.
Word came Tuesday evening that a pair of high-powered investors are in talks to bid on the Kings and keep the team in Sacramento. According to the Sacramento Bee, billionaire Ron Burkle and Bay Area investor Mark Mastrov are in serious discussions to team up on a bid and partner with the city of Sacramento on a plan to finance a new arena.
Johnson already has saved the Kings from relocation once.
The mayor made a pitch to the NBA Board of Governors and bought the city time to broker a deal that appeared to solve the team's arena woes. But brothers Joe, Gavin and George Maloof backed out of the tentative deal for a new downtown venue with Sacramento last April, saying it didn't make financial sense for the franchise.
Many of those who participated in that plan, from public officials to private investors, showed up at City Hall again to offer their vote - or checkbooks - one more time.
"The reason I'm committed to become a local member of the Kings' ownership is I really feel that we as a community need to get a return on all the hours and emotions that we spent trying to keep the team here," Taylor said. "I think we're owed a return on our investment."
Johnson maintains that Sacramento's biggest reason to be optimistic is that NBA Commissioner David Stern has granted him permission to address league owners and present a new ownership group and plan to keep the Kings.
The mayor commended Seattle's efforts to be an NBA city again, which includes Hansen reaching an agreement with local governments in Seattle last October on plans to build a $490 million NBA/NHL arena near the city's other stadiums, CenturyLink Field and Safeco Field. No construction will begin on that project - which also faces a pair of lawsuits - until all environmental reviews are completed and a team has been secured.
Seattle hoops fans have been reeling since Sonics owner Clay Bennett, ironically the chair of the NBA relocation committee now, moved the franchise to Oklahoma City in 2008.
"When I played in the NBA for 12 years, Seattle had some of the best fans in the NBA," Johnson said. "No different than Sacramento. Incredible fans. And when they lost their team a couple years ago, it was devastating to me, because those fans fought like crazy and rallied and they cheered on the home team. And I strongly believe they deserve an NBA team at some point. Just not ours."
"Don't celebrate too early," he said.
In front of a cheering City Hall crowd filled with fans and public officials Tuesday, Johnson introduced the first part of his four-step plan to keep the Sacramento Kings in California's capital city.
The three-time NBA All-Star turned mayor unveiled 19 local investors who have pledged at least $1 million each to be part of a group that would buy the franchise. Johnson said the major partner he hopes will anchor the last-ditch deal to keep the Kings from moving to Seattle will be revealed as soon as this week.
"We've been here before," Johnson said. "Our backs have been against the wall. They told us it wasn't going to happen. But each and every step along the way, as long as there is time on the clock, our community always finds a way to stand up for itself."
Unlike the last two years, Sacramento is up against a group that already has signed agreements to acquire the Kings and build a new arena for the franchise.
The mayor's announcement came a day after the Maloof family announced a deal to sell the Kings to a Seattle group that includes investor Chris Hansen and Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer. The signed purchase agreement is still pending a vote by the NBA Board of Governors.
The group will buy 65 percent of the franchise, which has a total valuation of $525 million, and move the team to Seattle and restore the SuperSonics name, a person familiar with the decision has said. That means the group will pay a little more than $340 million.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal is waiting to be approved. Hansen's group also is hoping to buy out other minority investors.
The main stipulation Johnson is counting on is that the Maloofs are still allowed to receive other offers until the league approves the sale, which the mayor expects to take until at least April, when owners meet in New York. The deadline for teams to file for relocation for next season is March 1, though that has been extended the last two years for the Kings.
Johnson said he has spoken with more than one heavy-hitting investor to back the plan and produce a "fair and competitive offer" to the NBA. He also said prominent Sacramento-area lawyers have offered to work pro bono for the city's cause.
"I just say to the fans in Seattle: be cautiously optimistic. Be smart. But this isn't about our city against their city, or one mayor against another mayor," Johnson said. "We have something that's ours and we want to keep it, and we're going to do everything we can to make Sacramento the final resting place of the Sacramento Kings."
The final three phases of the mayor's "Playing to Win" plan are finding the major financer to compete with the Seattle group's offer, demonstrating the city's commitment to a new downtown arena and showing the strength of the Sacramento market. None of those crucial pieces have been announced.
Some of the 19 proposed minority investors, two of whom Johnson said chose to remain anonymous, stood next to the mayor and spoke about why they agreed to non-binding pledges.
The group includes developer David Taylor, who backed a plan to build a $391 million arena in downtown Sacramento before the deal collapsed last year; Phil Oates, a developer and the son of Sacramento-area real estate pioneer Marvin "Buzz" Oates; and Kevin Nagle, a business executive and co-owner of the Town Center who helped increase Sacramento sponsorship and season-ticket sales when the Kings explored a move to Anaheim two years ago.
Word came Tuesday evening that a pair of high-powered investors are in talks to bid on the Kings and keep the team in Sacramento. According to the Sacramento Bee, billionaire Ron Burkle and Bay Area investor Mark Mastrov are in serious discussions to team up on a bid and partner with the city of Sacramento on a plan to finance a new arena.
Johnson already has saved the Kings from relocation once.
The mayor made a pitch to the NBA Board of Governors and bought the city time to broker a deal that appeared to solve the team's arena woes. But brothers Joe, Gavin and George Maloof backed out of the tentative deal for a new downtown venue with Sacramento last April, saying it didn't make financial sense for the franchise.
Many of those who participated in that plan, from public officials to private investors, showed up at City Hall again to offer their vote - or checkbooks - one more time.
"The reason I'm committed to become a local member of the Kings' ownership is I really feel that we as a community need to get a return on all the hours and emotions that we spent trying to keep the team here," Taylor said. "I think we're owed a return on our investment."
Johnson maintains that Sacramento's biggest reason to be optimistic is that NBA Commissioner David Stern has granted him permission to address league owners and present a new ownership group and plan to keep the Kings.
The mayor commended Seattle's efforts to be an NBA city again, which includes Hansen reaching an agreement with local governments in Seattle last October on plans to build a $490 million NBA/NHL arena near the city's other stadiums, CenturyLink Field and Safeco Field. No construction will begin on that project - which also faces a pair of lawsuits - until all environmental reviews are completed and a team has been secured.
Seattle hoops fans have been reeling since Sonics owner Clay Bennett, ironically the chair of the NBA relocation committee now, moved the franchise to Oklahoma City in 2008.
"When I played in the NBA for 12 years, Seattle had some of the best fans in the NBA," Johnson said. "No different than Sacramento. Incredible fans. And when they lost their team a couple years ago, it was devastating to me, because those fans fought like crazy and rallied and they cheered on the home team. And I strongly believe they deserve an NBA team at some point. Just not ours."
The NBA is just frustrating, and not worth the time.
Teams move. One city is happy and one is sad. That's how the NBA works. Deal with it.
The ONLY plus in not getting the team would be that Clay Bennett would ahve to pay $30 million....
Another aspect of this I haven't seen mentioned are the other 35% owners. Â If KJ can get together a competing offer for the 65% that Hansen is buying does the NBA take into account the wishes of the other owners, and could that sway the decision at all.
 SEATTLE had the Super Sonics for many years, and lost the Sonics because the support for the Sonis dropped dramatically because of Gary Peyton's arrogant behaviour. Shawn kemp was, too me an outstanding player and I just loved it when he hammered on that freak from Chicago (black guy with dyed hair who wore dresses) and he was a more outstanding player than peyton was. peyton caused discord with team mates and fans alike. thus the down turn in area support.
 If Seattle gets the NBA back, please, in your contracts with players put in a stronger player contract to get rid of any arrogant players like peyton.
 I support the Sonics return and will see some games occasionally, but I will not come if the Spawn of Peyton or his ilk think they are Seattle Royality.
 @Cliff Trudeau It's Payton, and please stay away, the Sonics don't need your "support".
@oledawg @Cliff Trudeau But he's right.
 @Sounder Thinker You think the Sonics lost support because of GP, I don't think so, he's one of the most popular players here ever, and continues to show support for the team and the city.
Someone stole our team so we're stealing someone else's team. If you're mad about the Sonics being stolen, granted through a shady set of circumstance, you're being a hypocrite.Â
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8870677/kevin-johnson-mayor-sacramento-tells-seattle-celebrate-too-early
From what I have read, the binding legal contract has already been signed to sell the Kings to the Seattle group. All it needs is the formality of the league approving the sale. Â Sounds like KJ is doing things a little too late, But if they keep the Kings I will be happy for them. Especially after the bs we went through with the Sonics
I hope the Mayor of Sacramento gets to keep the Kings in Sacramento.....
This is just silliness. The only way our thing folds is if the notorious Maloofs renege
Since Clay Bennett is on the relocation committee, which way do you think he will vote? Especially since if we don't land a team in 5 years (& have tried so), he owes Seattle another $30 Million
Â
http://www.komonews.com/sports/27157284.html
Oh no...word is burkle and and mark mostrov r in deep talks about buying kings ! Kj expected to reveal big money whales on Friday.
I appreciate what KJ is doing, and quite honestly if we had a mayor like him in 2008, the Sonics likely never would have left. Â Unfortunately I just dont think the money is there. Â If it was it would have been there before now. Â 19 different investors each fronting one million dollars is not going to get it done. Â I honestly feel bad for the fans in Sacramento, but I am really looking forward to having basketball back here in Seattle.Â
 @The206 The game with the money still has not ended,Sonics are still far away from Seattle
 @Dozen 123  @The206 http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8870677/kevin-johnson-mayor-sacramento-tells-seattle-celebrate-too-early
Why don't you all wait until the last minute, eh?
@Hagar ...the Maloofs were very clear that the team was not for sale. Most likely it was not a surprise to anyone affiliated w kj and his team when all the news broke ! They needed the maloofs to make the 1st move! Maloofs must have 0 faith in sacramento market. And they hate kj !
Try as they might Sacramento isn't going to be able to save this team. They just aren't a major league city. It's not their fault that's just the way it is. From what I understand their arena needs major repairs if not being outright replaced. They tried last year and couldn't get it done. So besides trying to get a buyer for the team they would have to address their arena concerns. As for loyalty to a City the NBA has none. 5 years ago proved that.
Seattle could not keep the previous basketball team (the only men's team to win a championship). So let's do it again? Pathetic these fans I will give you that. Remind me of when the sonics high tailed out of Seattle and you were all whinny little babies. Now here you go again.
 @sunnysandiego Coming from a San Diego fan? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!
 @sunnysandiego It's amazing how you must think anyone's gonna take your comment seriously given your previous track record. Even more amazing how you have the nerve to call someone else pathetic.
 @Zoso  @sunnysandiego Yes, I believe Sandiego boy is what they refer to as a troll. Probably looks like one too. LOL!
 @Scoondog Oh he is. He doesn't even live here, yet he comes on here and trashtalks everything about the area. He's been banned at least a dozen times with God knows how many usernames.
You're just full of Schadenfraude aren't you.
Isn't Mayor Kevin Johnson use to be a NBA player, in fact he was a Seattle Sonic player. Am I right?
 @michael-kawahara Really?  You are on a damn computer posting this crap at least take a minute to look it up.  He was drafted by Cleveland, played one season there and then finished out his career in Phoenix.  Never played in Seattle.  Google or Bing is your friend!
 @oledawg So what!!!
Â
Are you the conversation monitor?
Â
Put a sock in it.
 @commonHuskyfan Nah, in fact I am not and I won't.  "in fact he was a Seattle Sonic player" you go ahead and continue to read that garbage, I'll correct them.
@michael-kawahara  He played for the Suns in the 90's.
Well the sign in the back is incorrect as Seattle does hold an NFC title!Â
 @rikki the lady holding that sign probably holds an NFC title
Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson - "We've unveiled 19 local investors who have pledged at least $1 million each to be part of a group that would buy the franchise."
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Really? So how does 19 million compete with $525 million?
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Kevin Johnson - "It is unprecedented for the NBA to relocate a team with 28 years of history...literally no other NBA team..."
Â
Really? So no team had a 41 season history starting in 1967 including a Championship in '79, almost another in '96, during a period where the team was on the verge of becoming probably the greatest basketball team that ended up getting moved to OKC? In addition, no team in history has not had 27 years of history as the Royals in both Rochester and Cincinatti, then spent 13 years in Kansas City as the Kings before moving to Sacramento? Â
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Hey Mr. Sac Mayor! Before you decide to open your mouth, do your homework!
@Zoso  Don't hate on their mayor. Unlike Seattle, Sacramento has a mayor that gives a damn. He helped broker a deal for a new stadium last year. Unfortunately, the Maloofs stabbed him in the back. Kevin Johnson let the Maloofs have it in the press and that just ticked them off. Just like Howard Shultz, the Maloofs were committed to selling the team to an outsider.
Â
I want a team in Seattle, I really do. However, I feel bad for the fans down there. This is the NBA though.
 @path_tech The truth is, if the mayor really wants to save the team, which I have no problem with, he's gonna have to do a hell of a better job than that.
What worries me is how no matter how nice of a arena you build for them it will probably suck in their eyes in 15 or 20 years. The place where the Kings play now isn't that old.
 @Ankle Biter Valid point. The NBA praised the remodel of Key Arena in the mid-90's then 10 years later said it wasn't suitable.Â
@Casey Lytle  Yep. I still want to kick David Stern in the jimmies for the about face he did on Key Arena.
This guy kind of reminds me Gery Lock, running around the country trying to save the worthless Sonics. I say, keep your damn team and bring us the NHL instead.Â
 @Bianca No NBA = no NHL.  It's part of the deal.
Please, keep your money-grubbing sports franchise that sucks up all your public works tax dollars and turn it into giant salaries for contractors building arenas every 20-30 years.
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 @NWCoin Wow! I thought the whole thing was privately invested and no tax money was gonna be spent on this. Either that or someone else yet again decides to steer clear of the facts.
 @Zoso Another lie from Hansen's propaganda machine.Â
 @The206  @NWCoin  @Zoso crickets
 @NWCoin  @Zoso Facts please
Okay, back up your claim!
How come all those people in Sacramento comes out at the last minute to try and save a rotten team? 19 million will not do it.So Mr. Mayor cry all you want your team is coming to Seattle. We got a lot more money than you do. Be sides your State of California is strapped for money and can't afford the team or build you another arena. So please say good by to your team. They are coming North.
Matching funds isn't going to do it. The dealbreakers are the arenas. The arena KJ had an agreement for was a low-budget arena compared to what Hansen is proposing up here. The Sacramento deal was $255 million in public money, around $73 million in private money coming partly from an NBA "loan" to the Maloofs and the rest from AEG. Seattle's version? $200 public money, $290 million private money, no NBA loan, more luxury boxes, more potential income. The dollars win. It's not just that Sacramento is the 20th ranked market and Seattle is 12th, it's the average income and spending within that market. There is more potential revenue in the Seattle market.