The National
Basketball Association's 29 team owners will likely vote to force Donald
Sterling to sell the Los Angeles Clippers after he was banned for life
for racist comments, some of the owners said on Wednesday. As it appeared more
likely the team would be put up for sale, talk show host turned media
businesswoman Oprah Winfrey emerged among potential buyers who have
expressed interest. She said she was in discussions with producer and
film studio executive David Geffen and Oracle Corp computer technology Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison to bid for the team if it becomes available. NBA
Commissioner Adam Silver, who also announced a $2.5 million fine on
Sterling on Tuesday, asked the league's governing board of fellow owners
to act immediately to force Sterling to sell the club he bought 33
years ago. Although no
firm date for the vote was given by the NBA, early indications were that
owners would overwhelmingly support the unprecedented move. "We
run a color blind league and this should not be tolerated," Sacramento
Kings owner Vivek Ranadive told ESPN Radio. "The only thing we care
about is do you have game. "I would be surprised if this was not a
unanimous vote. The owners are amazing people, they are color blind and I
fully expect a unanimous vote." Under the NBA's own bylaws, it is up to the league's owners to decide whether to force the sale of the Clippers franchise. At least three-quarters of the owners would have to support the move but sports business experts said Sterling's peers might be leery of action they felt could jeopardize their own property rights in the future. According
to NBA bylaws, Silver must provide a written copy of any charges within
three days to Sterling, who has five days to answer. A special hearing
of the Board of Governors then will be held on a date no more than 10
days after Sterling's reply. The board's advisory finance
committee has a meeting scheduled on Thursday to go over the next steps
in removing Sterling as owner of the Clippers, a spokesman for the NBA
said. POTENTIAL BUYERS Glen
Taylor, the owner of the Minnesota Timberwolves and interim chair of
the NBA Board of Governors, said the ideal course of action would be if
Sterling just agreed to a sale. "The
problems would occur if he decides that he doesn't want to sell the
team and we think that it should be sold," Taylor told the St. Paul
Pioneer Press. "Then we have to make sure that we got the votes and then
enforce that." Taylor
said he had not spoken to all of the owners, but said he was "reasonably
sure" there was enough support for a forced sale and he expected there
would be potential buyers. Earvin
"Magic" Johnson, the former basketball star who is a part owner of the
Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team and who once had a stake in the Los
Angeles Lakers, has been mentioned as a possible suitor for the
Clippers. On Monday, the day before commissioner Silver's announcement,
Johnson had tweeted that "I want to put a stop to a rumor. I am not
trying to buy the Clippers, they already have an owner." One of
boxing' s biggest names, five-division world champion Floyd Mayweather
Jr., expressed interest in comments to reporters in Las Vegas.
Clippers owner Sterling was forced out of basketball on Tuesday after
two websites released audio recordings of him criticizing a woman
friend for "associating with black people." The woman heard on the
recordings at the heart of the scandal is said to be a 31-year-old Los
Angeles model who goes by the name V. Stiviano. The recordings drew
outrage from players, fans, politicians and commercial sponsors, several
of whom said they were cutting ties with the team, even after the NBA
moved to expel Sterling. The scandal quickly grew into a national discussion of race relations transcending basketball. Sterling
has not yet commented on the sanctions against him and it was not
immediately clear whether he would seek to challenge the ban in court.
Sterling did not respond to requests for comment from Reuters. But
lawyers with expertise in sports law gave him little chance of
successfully suing the NBA, citing league governance rules that all
owners must accept.
NBA owners likely to force Sterling to sell Los Angeles Clippers
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Reuters
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