Los Angeles Times

Clippers might be heading for new Inglewood arena

It’s not a done deal, with AEG trying to keep team at Staples, but Ballmer wants state-of-art venue.

- By Nathan Fenno

City will vote on the project, which is separate from the new football complex. AEG wants to keep team at Staples Center.

As round-the-clock constructi­on continues on the $2.6-billion stadium for the Rams and Chargers in Inglewood, the resurgent city is moving toward adding another team.

Inglewood’s City Council will vote Thursday on an exclusive negotiatin­g agreement for a Clippers-controlled company to build an arena for the team, according to a copy of the document.

The 22 acres for the arena are across the street from the 298-acre site where Rams owner Stan Kroenke is building the stadium as part of a sprawling mixeduse developmen­t.

The Rams aren’t involved in the Clippers’ arena project, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation, though representa­tives of Kroenke and the Clippers had multiple discussion­s about the team joining the Rams’ project, which is scheduled to be completed in 2020, or building on an adjacent parcel.

The agreement between the Clippers-controlled company, Murphy’s Bowl LLC, and Inglewood will run for 36 months with the option for a single six-month extension. That gives the team time to complete lengthy environmen­tal reviews. The city will receive a nonrefunda­ble deposit of $1.5 million to defray costs associated with the effort.

But this doesn’t mean the Clippers are leaving Staples Center for Inglewood.

Two people familiar with the situation told The Times that the Clippers and Anschutz Entertainm­ent Group, which owns Staples Center, continue to renegotiat­e a deal for the team to remain in the arena that has been home since 1999.

The Clippers, who declined to comment, have a lease to play in Staples Center through 2024. An AEG spokesman said the company wasn’t aware of the pending agreement with Inglewood.

AEG previously lost out on L.A.’s long-running search for an NFL team. The company ended its planned downtown stadium in 2015 after Kroenke announced his stadium plan and the Chargers and Raiders unveiled a rival — and ultimately unsuccessf­ul — concept in Carson. Losing a key tenant at Staples Center that fills dozens of nights every year would be another blow.

But billionair­e Clippers owner Steve Ballmer hasn’t hidden his desire for a new arena since purchasing the team for $2 billion in 2014. He would pay for the entire project in Inglewood, according to a person close to him. Kroenke is also privately financing his stadium.

If the arena moves forward, the Clippers would purchase the land — bounded by Century Avenue to the north and Yukon Avenue to the east — from the city, the Inglewood Successor Agency and third parties. The land is currently occupied by an assortment of businesses including a storage company, auto detailing shop and motel.

The agreement doesn’t disclose how much the Clippers would pay Inglewood for its land. And it tiptoes around the third parties who would need to sell their land in order for the stadium to move ahead, describing them as “potential participat­ing parcels” and broaching the possibilit­y of “eminent domain proceeding­s.” Those parcels make up about half of the site, according to a map attached to the agreement.

The team will be required to present initial renderings of the arena within 180 days of the agreement’s approval. The agreement calls for an 18,000- to 20,000-seat arena that is “state of the art” and includes on-site parking.

Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts Jr. didn’t return a request for comment.

The Clippers have flirted with other locations, including the Santa Monica Airport, but were always likely to try to strike a deal whenever the NFL landed, according to a source familiar with the team’s thinking.

Ballmer’s fingerprin­ts are on the 21-page document that could upend the profession­al sports landscape in L.A. The document directs correspond­ence for Murphy’s Bowl LLC be copied to SPI Holdings in San Francisco to the attention of Dennis J. Wong.

Wong, Ballmer’s college roommate, joined the Clippers as a minority owner in January 2016. He is managing director of SPI Holdings and helped advise Golden State Warriors owner Joe Lacob on the team’s arena project in San Francisco.

Ballmer wants an arena of his own to innovate, improve the fan experience and not get the third pick of dates, as the Clippers currently do at Staples behind the Lakers and Kings.

During a conference in Manhattan Beach last fall, Ballmer promised progress on an arena.

“We’re going to have real options,” he said.

Staff writers Broderick Turner and Dan Woike contribute­d to this report. nathan.fenno@latimes.com Twitter: @nathanfenn­o

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? STEVE BALLMER, WHO BOUGHT the Clippers for $2 billion, would finance by himself a new arena south of Stan Kroenke’s football complex in Inglewood.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times STEVE BALLMER, WHO BOUGHT the Clippers for $2 billion, would finance by himself a new arena south of Stan Kroenke’s football complex in Inglewood.

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