The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Court filing alleges $400K paid to Williamson family in ‘18

- By AARON BEARD AP Basketball Writer

The legal fight over NBA rookie Zion Williamson’s endorsemen­t potential now includes an allegation that his family received $400,000 from a marketing agency before his lone season for Duke.

Prime Sports Marketing and company president Gina Ford filed a lawsuit last summer in a Florida state court, accusing Williamson and the agency now representi­ng him of breach of contract. That came a week after Williamson filed his own lawsuit in a North Carolina federal court to terminate a five-year contract with Prime Sports after moving to Creative Artists Agency LLC.

In court filings Thursday in North Carolina, Ford’s attorneys included a sworn affidavit from a California man who said the head of a Canadian-based firm called

Maximum Management Group (MMG) told him he paid Williamson’s family for his commitment to sign with MMG once he left Duke for the NBA.

The documents include a marketing agreement signed by Williamson with MMG from May 2019, a December 2019 “letter of declaratio­n” signed by Williamson and his stepfather agreeing to pay $500,000 to MMG president Slavko Duric for “repayment of a loan” from October 2018, and a copy of Williamson’s South Carolina driver’s license — which listed Williamson’s height as “284” and his weight as “6’06.”

In a statement to The Associated Press, Williamson attorney, Jeffrey S. Klein, said those documents were “fraudulent.”

“The alleged ‘agreements’ and driver’s license attached to these papers are fraudulent – and neither Mr. Williamson nor his family know these individual­s nor had any dealings with them,” Klein said. “We had previously alerted Ms. Ford’s lawyers to both this fact and that we had previously reported the documents to law enforcemen­t as forgeries, but they chose to go ahead with another frivolous filing anyway.

“This is a desperate and irresponsi­ble attempt to smear Mr. Williamson at

the very time he has the opportunit­y to live his dream of playing profession­al basketball.”

The affidavit is from Donald Kreiss, a self-described entreprene­ur who worked with athletes and agents in marketing relationsh­ips. He had recently contacted Ford then provided the affidavit last week outlining interactio­ns with MMG and Williamson’s family, according to one of the filings.

Ford’s attorneys have sought to focus on Williamson’s eligibilit­y. His lawsuit stated that Prime Sports violated North Carolina’s sports agent law, both by failing to include disclaimer­s about the loss of eligibilit­y when signing the contract and the fact neither Prime Sports nor Ford were registered with the state.

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