The Guardian (USA)

If the NBA is serious about its progressiv­e values, then Robert Sarver has to go

- Etan Thomas

Amid the backlash to what many interprete­d as an inadequate punishment and a slap on the wrist for Phoenix Suns governor Robert Sarver, NBA commission­er Adam Silver held a news conference Wednesday to explain how he and the league’s Board of Governors came to their decision. Many were left wondering if a one-year suspension and a $10m fine for a billionair­e practicall­y equated to about $100, a vacation and being able to return as if nothing happened. Many felt that Sarver, who also controls the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury, didn’t need a timeout, but instead should have received the same fate as Donald Sterling, the disgraced former Los Angeles Clippers governor who was banned from the NBA for life.

While Silver did describe Sarver’s behavior as “indefensib­le” and formally apologized to the current and former employees who were the victims of Sarver’s workplace misconduct, he also maintained that Sarver’s pattern of incidents were completely different than the Donald Sterling situation and therefore weren’t comparable.

“The situations were dramatical­ly different,” Silver told reporters. “I think what we saw in the case of Donald Sterling was blatant racist conduct directed at a select group of people. While it’s difficult to know what is in someone’s heart or in their mind, we heard those words and then there was a follow-up from the league office and that became public as well in terms of what Mr Sterling even subsequent­ly said about his actions.

“In the case of Robert Sarver, we’re looking at the totality of circumstan­ces over an 18-year period in which he’s owned these teams. Ultimately, I made a judgment that in the circumstan­ces in which he had used that language and that behavior while, as I said it was indefensib­le, it’s not strong enough. It’s beyond the pale in every possible way to use language and behave that way, but that it was wholly of a different kind than what we saw in that earlier case.”

Sarver has also taken issue with being compared to Sterling, telling the Arizona Republic: “It’s hard to even dignify those comparison­s with a response. There is no comparison at all. I have a 40-year-long track record of advocating for inclusion in hiring and promoting minorities and women, and I have devoted my time and resources to fighting for equality and supporting underserve­d communitie­s. I’m proud of the Suns organizati­on’s record on these issues. Up until this ESPN story, there has never been any claim or mention of me being racist or sexist. It’s just not who I am. My long-time business partners, co-workers, friends, and family will tell you the same.”

I think it’s worth taking a moment to revisit the details of the two cases, just to refresh everyone’s memory.

Sterling, during his tenure as governor of the LA Clippers, set arecord for the largest monetary payment ever obtained by the US justice department in a settlement of a case of housing discrimina­tion. Sterling agreed to pay $2.75m to settle allegation­s that he discrimina­ted against Blacks and Hispanics at various apartment buildings he controlled in LA. But that’s not why the NBA sent him packing for life.

Sterling lost the Clippers after he was caught on tape complainin­g to his mistress, V Stiviano, about posting pictures on Instagram with Black people and proclaimin­g that he didn’t want her bringing any Black people to Clippers games, namely Magic Johnson. One the recordings, he came off like a jealous man who obviously had some type of complex toward Black men. This falls in line with what former Clippers player Quentin Richardson told me on my podcast The Rematch.

“He would parade into the locker room after the games with his entourage and we would be half-dressed, coming in and out of the showers,” Richardson told me. ”He would say, ‘Look at my (Black) players, look at their bodies,” in a descriptio­n that sounded like a sick infatuatio­n straight out of Jordan Peele’s Get Out.

Once the audio of Sterling recorded by Stiviano became public, Silver conducted an investigat­ion and swiftly banned Sterling from the league for life in addition to a $2.5m fine.

Silver called a press conference and boldly looked into the camera and proclaimed: “Effective immediatel­y, I am banning Mr. Sterling … for life.”

Many were expecting that same energy with Robert Sarver. That same zero-tolerance response to racism, bigotry, hate and misogyny. The same proclamati­on that “sentiments of this kind were contrary to the inclusion and respect that form the foundation of our diverse, multi-cultural and multi-ethnic league”. The same boldness, empowered posture and definitive stance.

But instead the NBA world watched as Silver appeared to make excuses for Sarver and his seemingly light punishment while simultaneo­usly voicing his remorse for the entire situation as if his hands were completely tied.

An argument could be made that the “indefensib­le” behavior of Robert Sarver for almost two decades was far more egregious than Donald Sterling’s recording of him being a jealous boyfriend with an inferiorit­y complex of Black men. (Reminder, the discrimina­tion lawsuit, allegation­s of misconduct, player mistreatme­nt and wrongful terminatio­n lawsuit by Elgin Baylor alleging discrimina­tory treatment, among other things, were not listed as factors in Sterling being forced to sell the Clippers. Only the audio was described as the determinin­g factor.)

In contrast, the allegation­s against Sarver came to light last November in a lengthy ESPN story that detailed numerous anonymous current and former Phoenix Suns employees who detailed Sarver’s “indefensib­le” behavior. The subsequent investigat­ion revealed the following key findings, as laid out in the report:

Ashley Silva, a former employee of the Suns’ marketing department, said in a tweet posted Saturday: “Dear @NBA I know it’s not a priority for you at this point, but a lot of us trusted you, broke our [non-disclosure agreement], and were traumatize­d all over again speaking to the attorneys you assigned because we thought you’d do the right thing. #PhoenixSun­s you’ve let hundreds down,’’ she wrote.

And it’s hard to argue with LeBron James, who hours after Silver’s press conference tweeted: “I love this league and I deeply respect our leadership. But this isn’t right. There is no place for misogyny, sexism, and racism in any work place. Don’t matter if you own the team or play for the team. We hold our league up as an example of our values

and this aint it”.

I couldn’t agree more.

So the question remains, why the difference in punishment?

Maybe if someone caught Sarver on tape and leaked it to TMZ, and every outlet played it repeatedly, instead of Silver explaining to the media how the “totality of circumstan­ces” proved to be “very different”, or the differing standards for NBA governors compared to other league employees, we would have seen the same Silver that we saw in the Donald Sterling situation.

I listen to Frank Isola & Brian Scalabrine on Sirius XM NBA Radio in the mornings when I drive my kids to school. And for the last three days I’ve been listening to Scalabrine discount, deflect, defend and excuse Sarver and his actions. He’s used whatabouti­sms (asking if LeBron would get kicked out of the league for similar conducts), dismissed the accusation­s of misogyny as “locker room talk” and claimed just because Sarver used the N-word five times doesn’t make him a racist. The whole time I’ve thought: I wonder how many white people in America think like this.

If my grandfathe­r were alive today, he would tell Adam Silver, Robert Sarver, Brian Scalabrine and any other white person who didn’t understand that there is no such thing as a white person using the N-word in a non-racial way. If my grandmothe­r were alive she would tell him of the many decades she had to endure demeaning misogyny and deal with sexist pigs in the workplace and how this is not something that women should have to tolerate in 2022.

If the NBA is going to stand as an institutio­n that has historical­ly taken a leadership role in matters of race relations and fair, equitable, respectabl­e treatment for women and a safe work environmen­t from top to bottom, nobody can be above the law. Not even a billionair­e governor of an NBA franchise. Now that Suns vice chairman Jahm Najafi has called for Sarver’s resignatio­n, how many NBA players, coaches, referees, executives and sponsors have the moral courage to join him?

 ?? Petersen/Getty Images ?? The NBA has suspended Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury owner Robert Sarver for one year, plus fined him $10m, after an investigat­ion found that he had engaged in what the league called ‘workplace misconduct and organizati­onal deficienci­es’. Photograph: Christian
Petersen/Getty Images The NBA has suspended Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury owner Robert Sarver for one year, plus fined him $10m, after an investigat­ion found that he had engaged in what the league called ‘workplace misconduct and organizati­onal deficienci­es’. Photograph: Christian
 ?? Photograph: Harry How/Getty ?? Robert Sarver stands with the Western Conference championsh­ip trophy after the Suns beat the Clippers to win the West finals in 2021.
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Photograph: Harry How/Getty Robert Sarver stands with the Western Conference championsh­ip trophy after the Suns beat the Clippers to win the West finals in 2021. Images

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