Los Angeles Times

If you can’t beat them, buy them

Clippers owner would clear a big obstacle in the path of new arena if he acquires Forum.

- By Andrew Greif

For years, the company owning one Inglewood arena and a group proposing to build another have waged a bitter, expensive legal battle.

The cost of the litigation between Madison Square Garden Co., which owns the Forum, and Murphy’s Bowl LLC, the Clippers-controlled company developing a proposed billion-dollar stadium less than two miles away, has cost both sides millions in legal fees each month, according to a person not authorized to speak publicly.

And in recent months, neither side appeared ready to blink.

“I’m not sure they understand what they’ve gotten themselves into, from my perspectiv­e,” Clippers owner Steve Ballmer said in October, “in the sense that we’ll just keep going.”

Earlier this winter, however, as the Clippers’ project gathered momentum, the sides began discussing a resolution. Negotiatio­ns for Ballmer to buy the Forum have taken place since at least early February and a deal is close to completion, a second person with knowledge of the discussion­s said.

By effectivel­y buying out MSG’s opposition, Ballmer, the wealthiest owner of a North American profession­al sports franchise, would clear a significan­t obstacle in the path of starting constructi­on on the privately financed Inglewood Basketball and Entertainm­ent Center by July 2021 in order to open on time for the 2024-25 NBA season.

Though the Inglewood stalemate is not the first high-profile dispute between owners of existing stadiums and others backing a new, competing venue, it has been unique in its vitriol and length, said Marc Ganis, the founder of Sportscorp Ltd, a Chicago-based sports business consulting firm with experience in Los Angeles.

Bringing the two sides together, he speculated, could have been common ground of the high cost of continuing that fight. The Clippers’ lease to play at Staples Center, its home since 1999, ends in 2024.

“Ballmer very much wants to build a new arena and would like to do so sooner rather than later and the Forum owners believe one of two things,” Ganis said. “They believe they can’t stop it but can only delay it, or two, Ballmer is offering such a sweet price that they can basically cash out and earn roughly what they would have earned had they kept operating it.”

MSG decline to comment on the potential sale.

In a statement released Sunday, the Clippers said they “continue to pursue plans to build a state-of-theart, 18,000-seat basketball arena and entertainm­ent complex in Inglewood and are currently working with the city to successful­ly complete the comprehens­ive Environmen­tal Impact Report. We are examining every possible way to resolve our difference­s with Madison Square Garden Co. regarding our new arena.”

Those difference­s involved three ongoing lawsuits by Madison Square Garden Co. In addition, a community group whose legal fees are being paid by MSG also has one pending suit and another it is appealing. Murphy’s Bowl countersue­d MSG last year.

Built in 1967, the Forum was purchased by MSG for $23.5 million in 2012 and underwent $100 million in renovation­s one year later to transform the former home of the Lakers and Kings into what the company predicted would become “the largest and most important indoor performanc­e venue in the country.”

How Ballmer would use such a venue, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2014, is unclear, but the renovation­s that made the Forum a top concert space also left it with a configurat­ion unusable for NBA and NHL games. There are no plans to knock down the venue, according to a person briefed on the potential use.

In recent months, Ballmer’s proposed arena received several proverbial green lights. In October, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion

determined that 37 applicatio­ns related to the project posed no hazard to air navigation. In November, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled the 28acre complex did not violate the state’s Surplus Land Act. That ruling followed a lawsuit from a community group that alleged the exclusive negotiatin­g agreement between Inglewood and Murphy’s Bowl breached the act that requires public agencies to give first preference to using extra land for housing, recreation and schools.

Using legislatio­n passed in 2018, Gov. Gavin Newsom in December certified the project to shield it from extended environmen­tal litigation. One month later, MSG sued Newsom and the state’s Joint Legislativ­e Budget Committee, saying the legislatio­n violates the state constituti­on.

The Inglewood City Council is not expected to certify the environmen­tal impact report, which was released in December, until late spring or early summer. That would open a 270-day window for legal challenges to be adjudicate­d, a process that could end only a few months before constructi­on is set to begin.

TONIGHT

AT OKLAHOMA CITY When: 5 PST. On the air: TV: Prime Ticket; Radio: 570. Update: The Thunder have won a league-best 15 games when trailing entering the fourth quarter. No other team has more than eight.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben L.A. Times ?? STEVE BALLMER is committed to building an arena in Inglewood.
Allen J. Schaben L.A. Times STEVE BALLMER is committed to building an arena in Inglewood.

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