Dressed
in a dark suit and sporting a wide smile, Tim Leiweke — the former AEG
exec and longtime L.A. sports power player — pressed pen to paper and
delivered a message Seattle fans have been craving. “Ten years ago, you
had your heart ripped out,” Leiweke said. “We’re going to get you a
team.”
Uh-huh. A
team. That could mean anything, right? Like hockey. The NHL is
reportedly interested in bringing an expansion franchise to Seattle, and
the $600-plus million that Leiweke — now the CEO of the Oak View Group —
is investing in the refurbishing of KeyArena would make the Pacific
Northwest appealing. The WHL’s Seattle Thunderbirds draw well. The
Everett Silvertips — Go Tips! — do, too. It’s a good fit.
But it’s not the
team. Seattle fans have been smarting since Clay Bennett uprooted the
Sonics in 2008 and took off for Oklahoma City. Back then, Seattle was a
solid NBA market with an outdated arena. Since then, there has been one
near miss — hedge-fund manager Chris Hansen’s failed attempt to pull the
Kings out of Sacramento — and the fleeting possibility in recent years
that the Pelicans or Bucks could have been pried loose.
Seattle
wants the Sonics back. And the chances of that happening have never
been higher. Last summer, NBA commissioner Adam Silver told The Players
Tribune that Seattle would be on the short list for an expansion
franchise. “I don’t want to put a precise timeline on it,” Silver said.
“But it’s inevitable at some point we’ll start looking at growth of
franchises. That’s always been the case in this league, and Seattle will
no doubt be on a short list of cities we’ll look at.”
Relocation
is possible, too. The Grizzlies are owned by a Silicon Valley
billionaire who is bleeding money in Memphis. The Pelicans routinely
rank in the bottom third of the NBA in attendance and are — at best — a
fringe playoff contender. While former NBA commissioner David Stern was
often stubbornly opposed to relocation, several high-ranking team
officials told Yahoo Sports they believe Silver will take a more
pragmatic approach.
“I
think Adam wants the NBA to be in the best, most viable markets,” said
one high-ranking team executive familiar with the league’s thinking.
“He’s not looking to move anybody. But David was totally against
[relocation]. Adam, I don’t think, is quite as rigid.”
(This
is where we point out that both Memphis and New Orleans have
passionate, engaged fans — just not enough of them. And you can’t expect
team owners to swallow losses — the Grizzlies lost $40 million last
season (offset by $32 million in revenue sharing, per ESPN), while the
Pelicans were one of 14 teams that lost on pure net income — when a
vibrant NBA market is available.)
Leiweke
— who was flanked at Wednesday’s signing of a memorandum of
understanding underneath the Seattle Center’s Fisher Pavilion by newly
minted mayor Jenny Durkan, who wore, unsubtly, a Sonics T-shirt
underneath her jacket — is a realist. He’s not expecting a team to
commit to Seattle, nor is he anticipating the NBA expanding anytime
soon. Two cities are needed for expansion — the league is still iffy on
Las Vegas, though Mexico City is gaining some momentum, league sources
told Yahoo Sports — and Silver isn’t ready to water down the game just
yet.
“I’ve
been through this,” Leiweke told reporters. “I’ve seen teams ripped out
of communities. It’s not a pretty thing to go through. I feel the pain,
and we’ve been dealing with Sonics Rising and the Sonic community, and
we understand. Lots of people have preferences about the NHL compared to
the NBA. Whichever one comes first, if we do a great job with them, the
other one will come.”
Indeed.
In the pursuit of another NBA team, Leiweke could be Seattle’s best
asset. He’s widely respected by NBA officials, with a solid reputation.
And he’s patient. Leiweke has vowed that the arena renovation will be
far more than a facelift. The unique features of KeyArena will remain —
the roof and the glass fronts — but everything else will change. He will
tackle the brutal traffic issues the arena has faced in the past and
establish it as a premier concert venue along the way. Leiweke has built
18 arenas and stadiums in his career, and by 2020 he expects to add
another.
Nearly
10 years have passed since the Sonics skipped town, and memories of the
forest green jerseys have faded. Just four players from the last
Seattle team remain in the NBA. The city won’t get a team back anytime
soon, but for the first time in years there is hope that one day it
will.
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