SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
Sonics are awful -- and possibly staying put?
Sonics are awful -- and possibly staying put?
Last updated January 27, 2008 10:45 p.m. PT
By ART THIEL
P-I COLUMNIST
The debacle of the StudentSonics feels like one of the sorriest ordeals in the history of Seattle sports.
It terms of the appearance of infinite futility, it's tough to top the Mariners' 15 years to their first winning season, the dreariest trudge in the history of modern American team sports. But at least it ended. Can't say that yet for the StudentSonics.
Sitting through Wednesday's game with the Houston Rockets, which featured a winning opponent and a couple of intriguing characters in Yao Ming and Tracy McGrady, was nevertheless a chore. Even though the StudentSonics played well enough to bring a half-empty house to its feet at the end, there was an air of inevitability about the outcome despite a 13-point lead in the fourth quarter.
The team is playing at midseason exactly to the fate ordained after the dismissals of Ray Allen and Rashard Lewis. Assembled largely for reasons of lower payroll and expiring contracts, the roster lacks the two key elements of most successful NBA teams (without Michael Jordan): A center and a point guard. Nearly everyone else is a middle-sized forward of undetermined role and value.
The mishmash is coached by P.J. Carlesimo, a retread with a checkered NBA past who has done little to persuade players and fans that he has learned his unnecessarily overbearing tactics still don't work so well.
New GM Sam Presti seems able, but right now he is half of a league-wide joke that says he and Timberwolves GM Kevin McHale will be co-winners of the executive of the year award for the contributions they made in turning the Boston Celtics into a sudden powerhouse.
The debacle had its roots in the bungled stewardship of Howard Schultz and Wally Walker (attention Starbucks shareholders: If Schultz in his return to his old job as Starbucks CEO plans to do what he did for his hoops team, consider investing in all the tea in China). The best personnel move, for them, in their six years was selling to an overeager buyer from out of town who had no clue what he was overpaying for.
And as yet, no political or business leader has emerged to take public charge of the arena situation. All appear on hold until there is legal resolution of ownership's attempt to get out of the KeyArena lease after this season.
Comments from multiple attorneys who have read the public filings indicate the city has a good chance to win the argument that the lease can't be bought out, and the club will be forced to play two more seasons.
It might be pro basketball's only local win in 2008.
Despite the foregoing litany of despair, we take this moment to throw in a little perverse sunshine.
The New Orleans Hornets have negotiated an escape clause into their lease after the 2008-09 season.
How that affects the scene here takes some explaining, so hang in, please.
Despite having, astonishingly, the best team in the Western Conference, the Hornets are, not astonishingly, floundering financially in the devastated city. Even before Katrina, the Hornets weren't working out, with an average attendance of 14,735 ranking near the NBA's bottom in the first three seasons in the Crescent City.
Now, with many in a relatively small middle class having fled and almost no Fortune 500 companies to carry sponsorship freight, the Hornets are in worse shape.
Unclean as it feels to examine this civic pain through a pro sports prism, the fact is that on Jan. 9, the state and city were realistic enough to create a new lease deal for owner George Shinn that allows him to leave before the lease's old expiration in 2012.
Naturally, Shinn, who disgraced himself when the Hornets were in Charlotte and is perhaps the most unpopular owner among his NBA fellows, said all the optimistic things about meeting the announced goal by the end of next season of 14,735 -- the pre-Katrina average.
"It's going to be hard, very, very difficult for us NOT to pass that number," he said last week, despite the current average of a little more than 12,000, which includes ticket giveaways. "I think it's going to happen. We're happy to be in New Orleans and have made the effort to come back. We didn't come back to fail."
What else could he say? Shinn believes the fan base lost in the temporary relocation to Oklahoma City will be revived, starting with hosting the All-Star Game next month as well as by the success of a team that Saturday beat the defending champion Spurs by 24 in San Antonio.
He might be right. Even if he isn't right, moving won't be easy. Triggering the escape clause means he must cash out a local partner of his $62 million investment, and pay a relocation fee to the NBA of perhaps $40 million.
Nevertheless, the franchise may well be in play, creating two possibilities in Seattle:
- A Seattle ownership purchases the Hornets for a move, or
- More likely, StudentSonics owner Clay Bennett no longer tolerates losses in the wallet as well the courts of law and basketball. He sells to a local ownership group, taking his proceeds to buy the Hornets for less than the $350 million paid for the Sonics in 2006 and move them to his Oklahoma City hometown (Shinn and Bennett could be forgiven the relocation fee).
No knowledgeable person will talk about the scenario on the record, much less suggest it will happen; no one wants to add to New Orleans' misery.
But the movers and shakers in Seattle, New Orleans, Oklahoma City and New York know the path is there. The escape clause wouldn't have been created and accepted if the need for an out wasn't dramatic.
The NBA legitimately can say that it tried in New Orleans. It also wants to stay in Seattle, and wants to reward Bennett and Oklahoma City (not Shinn) for being good NBA citizens after Katrina.
An arena solution still is needed here. Discussions have taken place, but action awaits a favorable court ruling and Bennett's willingness to be a hometown hero in a different way.
Even then, the process of keeping the franchise will be a slog. Nothing is guaranteed. The ordeal seems infinite, and
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