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April 29, 2007

"Seattle's not going anywhere" Commissioner David Stern said.

SEATTLE - NBA Commissioner David Stern said at half time of the Spurs vs Nuggets game on Saturday night that "Seattle's not going anywhere". This was reported by Arnie Staplelton of the Associated Press.

I'll also note that the AP story online is often missing this paragraph at the bottom, even though I read it last night on some of the same media sources, including NBA.com

NOTES - The Nuggets are 2-5 in their last seven home playoff games, including two losses to San Antonio in 2005. ... Commissioner David Stern said at halftime he was optimistic Denver would get a WNBA team by next season. In a wide-ranging chat with reporters, he also insisted the Sonics would stay in Seattle. The Sonics' lease at Key Arena runs through 2010, but the Sonics aren't obligated to play in Seattle past next season without a new arena deal. "Seattle's not going anywhere," he said.
© 2000 - 2007 The Bryan-College Station Eagle, 4/29/07, 11:28am


I think the paragraph is vanishing from media sources because it isn't directly connnected to the Spurs vs Nuggets game.

Regardless, he said it and AP writers are pretty good at reporting accurate quotes.
This one quote can mean a few things:

1. The Commish is peaved that Clay Bennett said his first choice of destinations is Las vegas.
Note to Bennett: this isn't the NFL, and you're not Al Davis. You can submit papers to move and maybe the league says no. That can happen.

2. The Commish is peaved that Clay Bennett said he might leave Key Arena early.
Note to Bennett: this still isn't the NFL, and you're still not Al Davis. The NBA likes to have teams play out leases when possible, and avoid having any NBA team in court with any municipality. You can submit papers to move next year and maybe the league says no. That can happen.

3. The Commish was giving the NBA rubber stamp of "staying put"" even if they are working to leave a situation. This option does not mean that they want to leave the 15th largest media market for the 45th, or leave for the 31st television market in Kansas City. Having a team drop in value, due in part by it's value of local media, is bad for the NBA. The Commish will protect the league overall value, the action of one team can have an impact on the national television value.

4. The Commish knows that there is still a real chance of the Sonics staying in this media market.

I think that it's part of all 4 options. How they are weighted, and how long this lasts before the Sonics either strike a deal to stay here, or get the public support of the Commish to leave, is unknown.

April 25, 2007

Sonics on New Path to Americathon

SEATTLE - Clay Bennett doesn't realize that he's about to live the Americathon dream. Fortunately, I saw the movie in the theater when it came out in 1979. The seeds to a version of the Americathon scenario are playing out in the rumor that was posted last Friday on Royalbroughamway.com, see here:

According to a source close to the negotiations, The Seattle Supersonic's owner Clay Bennett has recently been in discussions with John Daniels Jr., the chairman of the Muckleshoot Tribe and their gambling facilities, with Bill Russell being the mediator, to create an alternative to the Renton arena proposal rejected by the Washington State House of Representatives. John Daniels Jr. is listed as one of the top 25 most influential people in the State of Washington. The Muckleshoot tribe owns more than 6 square miles of land around the Emerald Downs facility in Auburn, Washington. Their holdings also include the Muckleshoot Indian Casino, one of the largest casinos in Washington State.


I really, really hope this works out. That would be a great situation for the tribe and for the Sonics.

And in other "news", Bob Hill will not be returning, Rick Sund finally got a call returned by team ownership, only, they told him he wasn't the GM anymore. The search is on. Back in 1998 the Sonics had two guys named Paul they were looking at. They went the cheap route with management again, and chose Paul Westphal (the John Crotty era began and ended). Maybe this time the team will pick the Paul I wanted, and bring in Paul Silas. That issue should be up to the new GM, whoever that is going to be.

April 21, 2007

Is This It?

SEATTLE - No, things involving this much money never end cleanly, quietly, or completely. There's a market here, an area where people make enough money to support an average price to rent an apartment of $1000. They make enough money to pay more for an NBA ticket.
I don't see the Sonics walking away from the 15th largest media market just like that. I'll guess that a few owners at the meetings this week wouldn't mind having their team in this market.
It's not over until they leave, even then, it's isn't really over. How do you think Seattle got the Mariners?
Enough of that, you all can read the stories in the papers that report the news, and the stories planted by the Sonics in some other places, and the stories planted by the SEIU in the Seattle PI and Frank Chop's head.
I'm a citizen, I'll take any further conversationn on this topic to my local representation in government.

I think there is a remote chance that Paul Silas returns to work for Lenny Wilkins and the Sonics again, last time he was a player, they both got rings out of the deal.

April 07, 2007

Winding Down the Sonics Season

SEATTLE - October 28, 2006 I posted my preseason story, my hopes, and now we are heading to the end.

In the end, I predicted the Sonics finsh the year on another up note after a start and winter not nearly as horrible as last season: 43-39, second in the NW Division, 7th seed in the west.
With Robert Swift I think they would have won 48 games, 1st in the NW Division, into the second round.
The leadership of Ray Allen will carry this team to a better record than maybe they should really have without Robert Swift in the line-up.


That's what I said back in October, I was wrong. I just didn't see the number of injuries rivaling turn of the century Golden State Warriors.


Here are some grades, you can't get a C (satisfactory) if you didn't get into the playoffs.

Danny Fortson: I never expected Danny Fortson to show up. I - Incomplete. Don't let the door hit ya' where the good lord done split ya'.

Robert Swift: I had high hopes for big Rob, but he was done for the year before my preseason story. I - Incomplete. I think he will shock some people next year, in a good way.


Kareem Rush: the much debated 15th player, nobody gives a rat's ass now, not as if I did then. No grade.

Ray Allen: Ray willl have played 55 games, one less than the Flip Murray career maker year of 2004. Ray did pretty well on balance, but the tunnel vision he and the team had in many games trying to work a play where the intended outcome is a 20 foot shot hurt the teamm as often as it helped. Maybe a stronger coach, or stronger desire to go to the post late in games might have pulled the triple teams off Ray. C-, know when to defer, and why it helps the team.


Rashard Lewis: His ball handling made him a better player. He passed the ball and it didn't always come back around to him. Rashard will get to 60 games by the end of the year. He's not giving Seattle a hometown discount, the Sonics will make it up in years, and he's back next year. C-. As I write this you have 6 games to show more while out of the shadow of Ray.



Earl Watson: pass the ball, turn it over less. Those are a couple basic things required of a PG. D-

Luke Ridnour: Stop trying to score every time you touch the ball. D-

I'd like to move one or both of Watson and Ridnour and replace that roster spot with one good PG, rather than the two players with giant holes in their games (and heads) we have right now.

Chris Wilcox: he and Collison stepped up in the second half of the season. Chris couldn't pass the ball to himself, or put himself in at the ends of games for a post option, that's on the coach and the team captains. D+, you missed too many rotations.

Nick Collison: Collison became the solid player I thought he was when he was drafted, a double-double guy every team needs. His fouls were more under control. D+

Damien Wilkins: I just don't think that guy wants to be here, the look on his face when he was interviewed last summer after the Sonics matched the contract off toold me a lot, he looked like somebody shot his dog, shocked, sad. The beginnning of the season saw Damien chuck a lot of shots, he was a real flow stopper. D-

Mickael (Gelly) Gelabale: I saw one preseason game and thought he was going to be about as good as he is. Some guys have a feel for space on the floor, that's him. He finds space for offensive rebounds that is hard to teach. His on the ball defense is as good as Damien Wilkins', maybe better. I think the Sonics could move Damien to a place that would make him happy, and Gelly could filll every minute Wilkins had this year. D+


Mo Sene: he's one of many projects, nobody knows today what will become of him, and that says something about the team. I - Incomplete for a couple years.

Johan Petro: I've been saying this for a while, he's not a center, and that's ok. There aren't too many centers in the NBA anymore. I see no reason, now or in the future, to get rid of him. His mid-range game has helped that team with something it doesn't have a lot of, big men that can score. He's 21 years old, he was a very good pick, it will take him 2 more years to defend well enough to get more rotation minutes. At the end of Wilcox's contract this team will have some tough choices, it's a good problem to have. D+

Mike Wilks: he is a great 3rd PG, being 5-10-ish will hold him back. If the Sonics draft a PG then Mike might be out of a job here. D-

Andre Brown: I'm not so sure how good he really is, but when he's in the game the other team knows it. He's an enforcer on a team that doesn't play much defense, so, here he may be overvalued. He could get the full Reggie Evans treatment, a few years at low pay, and leave for part of some team's mid level exception. It's win-win for another year or two. D+

Bob Hill: Thanks for helping the players learn some skills to be better, but I think the owner will clean house, so, grading your years is moot.