For NBA, courting Steve Ballmer could be a strategic move

Dan Gorenstein May 30, 2014
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For NBA, courting Steve Ballmer could be a strategic move

Dan Gorenstein May 30, 2014
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The NBA hopes it’s just made a game saving shot.

Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer plans to buy the Los Angeles Clippers for $2 billion dollars. The deal — which must still be approved by the NBA — would come after the NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said he would force current owner Donald Sterling to sell after he made several racist and vulgar remarks in a recorded call.

There’s a photo making the rounds of Steve Ballmer at a playoff game earlier this month, with Commissioner Adam Silver in his ear. Wharton Business School Professor Kenneth Shropshire says it’s easy to imagine Silver making his pitch to Ballmer right then.

“If you think about the kinds of people you would speak to, Ballmer would certainly be on your list to court,” he says.

That’s because Ballmer’s worth $20 billion dollars, making him one of the richest people on the planet.

Only one of the richest people on the planet can afford to pay a record $2 billion dollars for an NBA team, a deal the league hopes is sweet enough to discourage Sterling from tying up the sale in court.

Going forward, Emory University’s Mike Lewis says the NBA would be psyched to have a deep-pocketed guy own the Clippers.

“You know they are sort of the New York Mets or the Chicago White Sox. They are the second team in that city. I think it’s really attractive to the league to essentially have two really strong franchises in a major city like LA,” he says.

Disposing of Sterling and the Clippers going deep into the playoffs — for NBA owners that would be fantastic.

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