Los Angeles Times

A real home-court advantage, finally

Clippers celebrate their new, $1.8-billion Inglewood arena with groundbrea­king party.

- By Andrew Greif

After the drum line and dancers filed off a scaleddown basketball court, but before Kawhi Leonard and Paul George closed the groundbrea­king ceremony of the Clippers’ longplanne­d Inglewood arena by dipping chrome-tipped shovels into dirt, Clippers owner Steve Ballmer told his audience about his favorite elements of the billion-dollar Intuit Dome.

The 18,000-seat arena’s architectu­re will seat fans closer to the court, and Ballmer’s voice rose to his trademark, excitable bellow while describing the potential for similarly roaring acoustics. He promised state-of-the-art technology. While describing the building’s 1,500 bathroom fixtures, one of the world’s wealthiest people noted he was “not ashamed to admit actually I’ve become a real obsessive about toilets.”

“I like to think about it as a basketball palazzo, an homage to the game of basketball,” Ballmer said Friday. “It’s not the Hall of

Fame, but with as many championsh­ips as we’re going to win here, it’ll be better than the Hall of Fame.”

At the mention of championsh­ips, of which the Clippers have earned none in their 51-year franchise history, a roar of noise swallowed his last words, the volume coming only months after the team’s first conference finals appearance. George and Leonard watched from seats along the model court’s baseline.

Yet what Ballmer made clear he liked most was that his team will have the $1.8-billion arena complex all to itself.

“We want to build a home that is of our own, that sets a standard for us,” Ballmer said. “We don’t play in anybody’s shadow.”

The unmistakab­le theme of the ceremony, which was lent the air of a pep rally by seats filled by local and state officials, players and team executives, and hand-picked fans, was a building of the Clippers’ own, a billion-dollar acknowledg­ment of the team’s eagerness to create its own space away from Staples Center and its co-tenant arrangemen­t with the Lakers, Kings and Sparks once their lease ends in 2024. The team’s entire basketball and business operations will be housed underneath one solar-panel-clad roof.

No longer will statues honoring other teams’ icons and successes sit outside the doors of a franchise still searching to end its title drought.

“If you share a building with not one but two teams, it’s a very difficult task, it really is,” said Jerry West, a consultant to Ballmer and Clippers executives since 2017. “For the players when they go in [to Intuit Dome] they know this building is dedicated to them. Nothing else is going to matter. They can have what they want around, they can have their own identity without having to you know, look at all the Laker greats that have played up there [in the rafters] and the enormous success the franchise has had, and also the Kings themselves.”

Unlike former Clippers owner Donald Sterling, who considered the possibilit­y of a move to Orange County at various points after moving the team to Los Angeles in 1984, Ballmer said he initially planned to stay downtown long-term upon purchasing the team in 2014, even going so far as to tell Gillian Zucker, the team’s president of business operations, during her job interview not to consider the idea of a Clippers-only arena.

But within barely a year, after what Ballmer called a nudge from his college friend and the team’s vice chairman, Dennis Wong, top Clippers officials were driving around Southern California scouting locations out of a belief that within a crowded market, there was a need to energize and distinguis­h the team’s identity.

Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts recalled a January 2016 meeting with Ballmer and Wong at the Marina del Rey Ritz-Carlton to discuss an arena whose constructi­on is beginning now, near the intersecti­on of Inglewood’s South Prairie Avenue and West Century Boulevard, only after a winding journey and years of costly legal fights. The Clippers did not take possession of the final parcels of the necessary 28acre plot until this summer after the city of Inglewood sought the remaining pieces through eminent domain.

“Mayor Butts,” Ballmer said, laughing slightly. “Boy, we’ve been through it.”

Only three years remain to deliver “the singular, best place for fans and players throughout the world,” Ballmer said. The arena will feature a two-sided, ovalshaped scoreboard featuring 44,000 square feet of LED lighting, which is about seven times larger than most NBA scoreboard­s, and a roof covered by the name of Intuit, the Silicon Valley-based software company best known for TurboTax, whose rights partnershi­p lasts 23 years for an undisclose­d sum.

Ballmer said he wanted a 4,700-seat section behind the opposing bench dubbed “The Wall,” reaching 51 rows high at a steep slope, to become synonymous with the arena like Fenway Park’s leftfield wall or Duke University’s student section.

He said Thursday that the team will have a contingenc­y plan in case of delays but was confident they would move in on time to allow customers to watch from “courtside cabanas” modeled after field-level suites in the NFL, or seats throughout the bowl with two inches more legroom than is typical. Fans will pick what they please from “smart” concession stands that will charge customers automatica­lly without the need of a checkout line or wallet, “technology willing,” Zucker said. Five courts will dot the property, with two for community use.

“I feel a little bit like a kid on Christmas: You see that big present sitting there, you know it’s not time to open it yet so what do you start doing? You rip the paper, you look inside,” Ballmer said. “The only problem we have right now is it’s three years before we get a chance to open the damn thing.”

About a dozen people lined Prairie Avenue before Friday’s event, holding signs criticizin­g the looming constructi­on and its potential effect on Inglewood residents. Inside the groundbrea­king’s tent, Ballmer reiterated that he will contribute $80 million toward affordable housing in the area.

While the Clippers discussed their intentions as a good neighbor, the inconvenie­nces they feel amid their current living arrangemen­t was apparent. The Clippers and Lakers are the only NBA teams that share a home court and the Clippers have long felt frustrated that a deal struck long before the current ownership took over gives the Lakers and Kings first priority in scheduling. It did not take Ballmer long to become dissatisfi­ed with less lucrative game days and tipoff times, such as weekend afternoons.

“I attended a whole lot of 12:30 p.m. games with sleepdepri­ved players rubbing bleary eyes in timeouts,” Ballmer said. “Don’t like those 12:30 p.m. games on Saturdays and believe me, in our own building we don’t have to play as many.”

Even Clippers home games can feel tilted against their favor. In 2018, when Leonard grabbed a microphone at midcourt to welcome fans before his first game as a Clipper, the cheers for the franchise’s most prominent free-agent signing were met equally by boos from Lakers fans.

As Leonard said in a team video, future fans’ team of choice “better be the Clips.”

‘I attended a whole lot of 12:30 p.m. games with sleep-deprived players ... and believe me, in our own building we don’t have to play as many.’

— Steve Ballmer

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? STEVE BALLMER is fired up about Intuit Dome, the Clippers’ new home beginning in the 2024-25 season that will boast state-of-the art technology.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times STEVE BALLMER is fired up about Intuit Dome, the Clippers’ new home beginning in the 2024-25 season that will boast state-of-the art technology.

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