Stabroek News

Mavs’ Cuban says NBA could return by May

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After years of lawsuits and negotiatio­ns, Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer cleared the way for his longdesire­d new arena.

The Clippers announced Tuesday that Ballmer’s newly formed CAPSS LLC reached an agreement with The Madison Square Garden Company to purchase The Forum in Inglewood, Calif., for $400 million in cash. The deal brings to an end the

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said he’s hopeful the NBA can resume playing games on TV, without crowds, by May.

“America needs sports right now. We need something to cheer for. We need something to get excited about. We need a team to root for, and I think the NBA can fill that need,” he told Neil Cavuto of FOX Business yesterday.

The NBA has indefinite­ly suspended its regular season amid the current pandemic, years of litigation between the sides over the Clippers’ plans for a new arena in the area. There have been three lawsuits surroundin­g the issue, including one addressing the city’s agreement to not promote The Forum’s competitio­n, and another in which Knicks owner and MSG CEO James Dolan accused the city of Inglewood of doing an under-the-table deal with Ballmer. According to a news and at least 10 active players have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Cuban told the Dallas Morning News he thinks the NBA will be the first profession­al league in the U.S. to bounce back.

“I’m proud of the NBA and the way we’ve reacted,” he said. “We’ve led the way and hopefully will lead the way out of this. No one has perfect informatio­n right now, so all decisions are tough, but if I had release issued by the Clippers on Tuesday, The Forum will remain a music-only venue, even after the team’s new home arena is complete.

“This is an unpreceden­ted time, but we believe in our collective future,” Ballmer said in the release. “We are committed to our investment in the City of Inglewood, which will be good for the community, the Clippers, and our fans.” to guess based off the people I’ve talked to at the CDC and other places, I would say that the over-under (for the league’s return) would be June 1 and I’m taking the under.

“... Hopefully by the middle of May we’re starting to get back to normal and the NBA is playing games, maybe not with fans, but we’re playing games.”

—Field Level Media

Ballmer is looking to build an 18,000seat arena that will serve as the Clippers’ home arena and team headquarte­rs while also including a community center. The team hopes owning both buildings will ease traffic in the area by coordinati­ng schedules between the two venues.

The area, which once was home to the Lakers and the NHL’s Kings (The Forum) along with Hollywood Park racetrack (now closed) but hasn’t hosted major sports in two decades, will once again be a sporting destinatio­n with SoFi Stadium sitting just north of the Clippers’ planned arena.

SoFi Stadium is the new home of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers, and is scheduled to open later this year. The Clippers’ lease at Staples Center expires in 2023-24, and the team reportedly wants the Inglewood arena to be ready to host games the following season.

Ballmer, who turned 64 on Tuesday, is the league’s wealthiest owner. He has emphasized investing heavily in the franchise and its facilities — a stark contrast to previous owner Donald Sterling — since he bought it for $2 billion in 2014.

The agreement, which is expected to close within the next three months per the release, will extend all MSG employees currently working at The Forum offers to work for the new owner. According to the press release, the Clippers’ new arena will generate around 7,500 constructi­on jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs after the complex opens. The Clippers also are proposing a $100 million package of “community benefits.”

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