If Donald Sterling is compelled to sell the Los Angeles Clippers, the list of potential buyers has more stars than their roster.
Oprah Winfrey is contemplating a bid. Sean Combs is a Knicks fan, but he wants in.
Floyd Mayweather Jr. wants the whole team. Matt Damon wants a tiny piece.
Billionaires,
entertainers and athletes alike announced their intentions to pursue
the Clippers with varying degrees of seriousness Wednesday, proving the
longtime losers will be quite a prize if the NBA is able to wrest
control of the team away from Sterling after his lifetime ban for racist
remarks.
Winfrey led the list, and the media mogul is already bringing in her friends.
"Oprah
Winfrey is in discussions with David Geffen and Larry Ellison to make a
bid for the Los Angeles Clippers should the team become available,"
spokesperson Nicole Nichols confirmed in an email.
The
Clippers spent the last three decades rotting in the shadow of the
glamorous Lakers, who piled up championships while the lowly Clips only
racked up losses. With Sterling's ouster, the Clippers suddenly became
the most attractive team in town to wealthy fans lining up for an
unlikely chance to seize control of a Hollywood sports franchise on the
move.
David Carter, the
executive director of USC's Sports Business Institute, identifies
multiple factors contributing to the Clippers' extraordinary value.
"Interest
in the team results from the combination of NBA teams being rare assets
that are seldom available for purchase, the location of this particular
team, and potential owners' belief that revenue streams linked to
rehabbing the brand and participating in future revenue linked to a new
TV deal all make the team very attractive to prospective buyers," Carter
said.
For a day, almost
everybody seemed interested in being those buyers — and even
entertainers without those limitless resources were clamoring for the
chance.
Combs, Rick Ross and Snoop Dogg
all aired their interest, as did longtime Clippers fan Frankie Muniz and
Damon, who told CNBC he'd like to be a "super tiny minority investor."
Fans also got in on the frenzy, opening campaigns on Kickstarter and
Crowdtilt to pool their resources for the club.
Mayweather
spoke seriously about his interest while preparing for his fight with
Marcos Maidana this Saturday, although Money May would have to curb his
enthusiastic sports gambling habit. Oscar De La Hoya, the majority
shareholder in Golden Boy Promotions whose statue sits outside Staples
Center, volunteered himself as a part-owner.
"The
league has made it known that it wants more minorities involved, and as
a proud Mexican-American, I will bring a different perspective to the
NBA in general, and the Clippers in particular," De La Hoya said. "I was
born and raised in Los Angeles. I know what it takes to run a
successful sports entity."
A vocal segment of the NBA's social media following immediately started a campaign to move the Clippers to Seattle, a basketball-loving city that has been without a team since Clay Bennett moved the SuperSonics to Oklahoma City in 2008.
A vocal segment of the NBA's social media following immediately started a campaign to move the Clippers to Seattle, a basketball-loving city that has been without a team since Clay Bennett moved the SuperSonics to Oklahoma City in 2008.
But
much of the Clippers' value results from their location in the nation's
second-largest city and their opportunity to sign a lucrative new
television rights deal in 2016.
The Clippers' association with
Sterling's racist remarks could have been crushing to their prestige and
value, but they don't seem to be a problem if Sterling is no longer
associated with the club.
"The
short term damage has been dramatic, but Commissioner (Adam) Silver
provided a tourniquet that has stopped the brand erosion," Carter said.
"The NBA, working in conjunction with new ownership, will have an
extraordinary opportunity to rehabilitate the team's reputation, and
then extend its brand."
The
Clippers haven't been known for success during most of their existence,
but that's changing. And what's more, the Clippers are cool.
Led
by point guard Chris Paul and high-flying forward Blake Griffin — two
All-Stars signed to long-term contracts — the Clippers have won two
straight Pacific Division titles and are on the brink of their third
playoff series victory since Sterling bought the team in 1981.
The
Clippers have captured the imagination of Los Angeles' counterculture,
the transplants and contrarian fans who aren't interested in the Lakers'
bandwagon. They're also attracting more of an international following
with each highlight-reel performance by Paul and dunking virtuosos
DeAndre Jordan and Griffin, who coined the phrase "Lob City" to describe
their daredevil style of play.
And
it doesn't hurt that the Lakers just finished their worst season in
more than 50 years, missing the playoffs for just the third time in 38
seasons. The Lakers appear to be years away from title contention, while
the Clippers are built to contend every year in the near future.
"We're proud of this team," Clippers guard Jamal Crawford said. "We're proud of our city, and we want to make them proud of us."
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