Showing posts with label KeyArena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KeyArena. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2013

NBA News 2013: Kings' likely move leaves players, fans in limbo

Sacramento Kings logo
Sacramento Kings logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Aaron Brooks has been in an awkward spot since news surfaced that the Sacramento Kings could be sold and moved back to his hometown of Seattle.

The Kings guard has no answers for family and friends who have been calling and texting for information. Even the excitement his brother, Alvertis, had when he showed up for a visit evaporated once he realized those in Sacramento might feel the same sorrow as when the SuperSonics left for Oklahoma City in 2008.

"Seattle does need a team. But you would hate to have a team leave a city you know wants a basketball team," Brooks said. "It's unfortunate."

For Sacramento players, coaches and fans, this is not an easy time.

The Kings hosted the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday night in the first game since the latest -- and perhaps most serious - round of relocation talks began, with chatter around the aging arena seemingly centering on everything but basketball.

Newspaper and television reporters from Seattle showed up looking for more answers along with an increased local media presence. Fans contemplated whether they should keep supporting a team they love. Ushers and parking attendants who depend on the team for work approached reporters asking if they knew what might happen.

Even players and coaches couldn't deny all the attention made it difficult to focus on the game.

"It's definitely going to be a distraction," said Kings coach Keith Smart. "But we're pros. We've got to figure out a way how to separate the two and then get ready to play."

Seattle investor Chris Hansen has contacted the Maloof family about buying the Sacramento Kings, people with knowledge of the situation said Wednesday. They spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because no deal has been reached.

One person said the Kings could sell for more than $500 million. The Kings' future in California's capital city has been uncertain since the Maloof brothers, who own the team, backed out of a tentative deal with Sacramento last April for a new $391 million arena in downtown.

Yahoo! Sports first reported the discussions between the Kings and Hansen, saying a possible sale could land the Kings in Seattle for the 2013-14 season, where the team would play at KeyArena as a temporary home until a new arena is constructed.

Kings point guard Isaiah Thomas, who is from Tacoma, Wash., and played at the University of Washington in Seattle, said the news has been difficult to ignore.

"I've seen the Sonics go. I've seen when a team gets taken away from a city and devastates the fans. It's not a good thing," Thomas said. "I don't wish moving a team on anybody."

Perhaps the most difficult decision has been placed on fans.

The Kings, once home to one of the most fervent fan bases of any sport in the country, have not made the playoffs in seven seasons. Since the collapse of last year's arena deal, attendance has been down, and apathy has been up. Sacramento ranks last in the NBA in average attendance at 13,177 per game.

"What (the Maloofs) are doing is like throwing their problems away," said 26-year-old Kings fan Nicole Shearer, whose parents were season-ticket holders from the first season in 1985 until 2007. "I think they realize how this affects people, but they really don't care. It's been a series of continuous problems for them as owners. But if they really cared, they would try to stay and work things out."

Kasim Ersoy, who has lived in Sacramento for two years, said he became a Kings fan when he watched the Chris Webber-Vlade Divac combo on television growing up in Germany.

"It's horrible that the Kings could be leaving," Ersoy said. "Basketball is my favorite sport in the U.S., so it will be very sad to not have an NBA team any longer in Sacramento."

Some Sacramento fans launched a fight to keep the team -- again.

The grass-roots organization Here We Stay, which has worked to keep the Kings for two years, started an online petition drive urging the NBA to allow a Sacramento buyer to match any offer from Hansen and give Seattle an expansion team instead. The petition had drawn more than 4,000 signatures within 24 hours.

Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson has said he would do all he could to try to find a buyer with a Sacramento connection to possibly purchase the team and keep it in California's capital city. It's not the first time Johnson, a former NBA All-Star, has faced a difficult challenge.

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/01/10/kings-sale-reaction.ap/index.html

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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

WNBA 2010: Storm close in on second WNBA title

Australian basketball player Lauren Jackson.Image via Wikipedia
SEATTLE -- Brian Agler watched his team throw the ball away and miss several free throws down the stretch Tuesday night.

When it was over, the coach focused on the bottom line: The Storm are just one win away from their second WNBA title.

"It's almost like everyone is disgusted with how we've played the last two games," Agler said. "The point is, we're up 2-0."

League MVP Lauren Jackson scored 26 points, Swin Cash added 19 and Seattle moved one step closer to the title with an 87-84 win over the Atlanta Dream in Game 2 of the Finals.

Seattle improved to 21-0 at home this season and is hoping it won't need another game at Key Arena. The best-of-five series resumes Thursday night in Atlanta, where the Storm can wrap up their first title since 2004.

"We pulled it off, thank God. So I'm happy," Jackson said.


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Sunday, September 12, 2010

WNBA 2010: Bird hits another game winner for Storm

Sunday, September 21st 2008.Image via Wikipedia
SEATTLE -- She really doesn't go back and watch them all. Continued success requires living in the present and looking to the future.

But someday, Seattle guard Sue Bird might take some time to review all the moments when she has been the difference in the clutch. And that will probably take awhile, because there are a lot of them.

Sunday in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals, Bird did it again. Her 18-foot jumper with 2.6 seconds left was the decisive basket for the Storm in a 79-77 victory in front of 15,084 at KeyArena.

Sue Bird had 14 points, eight assists and five rebounds -- and one game-winning shot.

"It was a very tough game, and it came down to the end," Bird said. "I don't think we played our best, but we still got the win. This is the Finals; it's never going to be easy."

But once again, it was Bird who had the last word. How many times have we said that?

As Atlanta coach Marynell Meadors put it, "If you give Sue Bird an open look with the game on the line, nine times out of 10 she's going to make it."

Indeed, Bird has become accustomed to sinking such shots and then answering the ensuing questions about why she's so good in these situations.

For Bird, she might as well be explaining why she's 5 feet, 9 inches. She's that way because … she's that way.


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