Marin Independent Journal

Former NBA Commission­er Stern dies at 77

- Staff and wire reports

David Stern, the basketball­loving lawyer who took the NBA around the world during 30 years as its longest-serving commission­er and oversaw its growth into a global powerhouse, died Wednesday. He was 77.

Stern suffered a brain hemorrhage on Dec. 12 and underwent emergency surgery. The league said he died with his wife, Dianne, and their family at his bedside.

“The entire basketball community is heartbroke­n,” the National Basketball Players Associatio­n said. “David Stern earned and deserved inclusion in our land of giants.”

The Warriors released a statement calling him a “visionary and innovator in every sense of the language.” The team also sent out video clips of a few of its leaders speaking to Stern’s impact.

“I think David Stern made probably a bigger impact on the game than any non-player in the history of the NBA,” Warrior coach Steve Kerr said. “When I think about when he took over as commission­er in the early ‘80s, where the league was — Finals games on tape delay, salary cap at like $4 million total — and to think where it is now, David Stern really led the expansion of the league.

“He had the vision to set the league on a course where it is today. So we all, everybody who’s part of the NBA, we all owe him a great debt of gratitude for his service, for his impact, and for everything he has done for our own individual lives.”

Warriors general manager Bob Myers added that Stern “formalized and structured” what the NBA is today.

“He modernized the NBA, he had a great strength of conviction,” Myers said. “Kind of a force of nature-type personalit­y to move the league in the direction that he wanted it to go . ... I think he’ll be lauded and appreciate­d for what he did.”

Stern had been involved with the NBA for nearly two decades before he became its fourth commission­er on Feb. 1, 1984.

By the time he left his position in 2014 — he wouldn’t say or let league staffers say “retire,” because he never stopped working — a league that fought for a foothold before him had grown to a more than $5 billion a year industry and made NBA basketball perhaps the world’s most popular sport after soccer.

“Because of David, the NBA is a truly global brand — making him not only one of the greatest sports commission­ers of all time, but also one of the most influentia­l business leaders of his generation,” said Adam Silver, who followed Stern as commission­er. “Every member of the NBA family is the beneficiar­y of David’s vision, generosity and inspiratio­n.”

Thriving on good debate in the boardroom and good games in the arena, Stern would say one of his greatest achievemen­ts was guiding a league of mostly black players that was plagued by drug problems in the 1970s to popularity with mainstream America.

He had a hand in nearly every initiative to do that, from the drug testing program, to the implementa­tion of the salary cap, to the creation of a dress code.

But for Stern, it was always about “the game,” and his morning often included reading about the previous night’s results in the newspaper — even after technologi­cal advances he embraced made reading NBA.com easier than ever.

“The game is what brought us here. It’s always about the game and everything else we do is about making the stage or the presentati­on of the game even stronger, and the game itself is in the best shape that it’s ever been in,” he said on the eve of the 2009-10 season, calling it “a new golden age for the NBA.”

One that was largely created by Stern during a three-decade run that turned countless ballplayer­s into celebritie­s who were known around the globe by one name: Magic, Michael, Kobe, LeBron, just to name a few.

Stern oversaw the birth of seven new franchises and the creation of the WNBA and NBA Developmen­t

League, now the G League, providing countless opportunit­ies to pursue careers playing basketball in the United States that previously weren’t available.

Not bad for a guy who once thought his job might be a temporary one.

He had been the league’s outside counsel from 1966 to ‘78 and spent two years as the NBA’s general counsel, figuring he could always go back to his legal career if he found things weren’t working out after a couple of years.

He never did.

After serving as the NBA’s executive vice president of business and legal affairs from 1980-84, he replaced Larry O’Brien as commission­er.

Overlooked and ignored only a few years earlier, when it couldn’t even get its championsh­ip round on live network TV, the NBA saw its popularity quickly surge thanks to the rebirth of the Lakers-Celtics rivalry behind Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, followed by the entrance of Michael Jordan just a few months after Stern became commission­er.

Warriors president and COO Rick Welts described Stern as a “friend, mentor and inspiratio­n.”

“For me it’s really hard to imagine a world without David Stern. I don’t think there’s any doubt that he is the single most important individual in the history of the NBA.”

Under Stern, the NBA would play nearly 150 internatio­nal games and be televised in more than 200 countries and territorie­s, and in more than 40 languages, and the NBA Finals and All-Star weekend would grow into internatio­nal spectacles. The 2010 All-Star game drew more than 108,000 fans to Dallas Cowboys Stadium, a record to watch a basketball game.

“It was David Stern being a marketing genius who turned the league around. That’s why our brand is so strong,” said Johnson, who announced he was retiring because of HIV in 1991 but returned the following year at the All-Star Game with Stern’s backing.

“It was David Stern who took this league worldwide.”

He was fiercely protective of his players and referees when he felt they were unfairly criticized, such as when members of the Indiana Pacers brawled with Detroit fans in 2004, or when an FBI investigat­ion in 2007 found that Tim Donaghy had bet on games he officiated, throwing the entire referee operations department into turmoil. With his voice rising and spit flying, Stern would publicly rebuke media outlets, even individual writers, if he felt they had taken cheap shots.

But he was also a relentless negotiator against those same employees in collective bargaining, and his loyalty

to his owners and commitment to getting them favorable deals led to his greatest failures, lockouts in 1998 and 2011 that were the only times the NBA lost games to work stoppages. Though he had already passed off the heavy lifting to Silver by the latter one, it was Stern who faced the greatest criticism, as well as the damage to a legacy that had otherwise rarely been tarnished.

“As tough an adversary as he was across the table, he never failed to recognize the value of our players, and had the vision and courage to make them the focus of our league’s marketing efforts — building the NBA into the empire it is today,” the NBPA said.

David Joel Stern was born Sept. 22, 1942, in New York. A graduate of Rutgers University and Columbia Law School, he was dedicated to public service, launching the NBA Cares program in 2005 that donated more than $100 million to charity in five years.

He would begin looking internatio­nally soon after becoming commission­er and the globalizat­ion of the game got an enormous boost in 1992, when Jordan, Johnson and Bird played on the U.S. Olympic Dream Team that would bring the sport a new burst of popularity while storming to the gold medal in Barcelona.

Stern capitalize­d on that by sending NBA teams to play preseason games against other NBA or internatio­nal clubs, and opened offices in other countries. The league staged regular-season games in Japan in 1991 and devoted significan­t resources to China, and Stern’s work there would pay off in 2008 when basketball was perhaps the most popular sport in the Beijing Olympics.

Growth slowed near the end of his tenure.

The worldwide economic downturn in the late 2000s all but wrecked his longtime hopes of expanding overseas and led to the second lockout, with owners wanting massive changes to the salary structure after losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year on their basketball teams, on top of losses in their personal businesses.

He helped get them, and the league was thriving again by the time he left office. Stern said he felt the time was right, confident that he had groomed a worthy successor in Silver, who had worked at the league for more than two decades.

Stern stayed busy, taking trips overseas on the league’s behalf, doing public speaking and consulting various companies. He was inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2014.

Stern and his wife had two sons, Andrew and Eric.

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