Homeless
NBA Team Checks on Las Vegas' Interest
Forced out of town by
Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans Hornets owner
George Shinn is exploring whether he can move
his National Basketball Association franchise
to Southern Nevada, a source close to the talks
said Thursday.
Shinn called Las Vegas Mayor Oscar
Goodman several times this week to discuss the
community's interest and ability to host his
team, though it remains unclear whether Shinn
hopes the Hornets' proposed stay would be temporary
or permanent, the source added.
Unlike the city's past flirtations with professional
sports, the source also stressed that, this
time, a team's representatives reached out to
Las Vegas, not the other way around.
Despite Shinn's inquiries, many obstacles could
chase the Hornets elsewhere. In addition to
scheduling challenges at each of the city's
busy arenas, the NBA's long-standing opposition
to sports book wagering on pro basketball could
pose an insurmountable hurdle.
As long as NBA games are posted at the state's
legalized sports books, the league will not
consider Las Vegas as host destination on either
a short- or long-term basis, NBA spokesman Tim
Frank said Thursday.
"That's always been our policy,"
Frank said. The local source agreed, saying
the team will not play here for precisely that
reason.
The NBA last month picked Las Vegas to host
its All-Star Weekend in 2007, but only after
state gaming leaders agreed to ban wagers on
NBA events that weekend. Casino leaders were
willing to give up All-Star action because the
game is not historically popular with bettors,
but it's highly unlikely a permanent ban on
NBA contests would be accepted in Nevada gaming
circles.
At his weekly news conference Thursday, Las
Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said he's received
calls from "a lot of people" who have
suggested Katrina's winds and waves could represent
a turning point in this city's ongoing quest
to land a major sports franchise.
But Goodman added he believes it's inappropriate
to "take advantage of people while they're
down," so he therefore declined to actively
court the Hornets.
Goodman also said he was contacted this week
by New Orleans sports representatives, though
he declined to identify who.
In an e-mail sent Thursday from a temporary
team office in Houston, Hornets spokesman Scott
Hall referred questions about the team's potential
relocation to the NBA league's office in Manhattan.
Reached there by telephone, Frank said league
leaders continue to work with the team on contingency
plans for the coming season, though no decision
has been made regarding alternate sites for
the 2005-06 schedule, or a permanent relocation
of the franchise outside of New Orleans.
The Hornets' first preseason game at New Orleans
Arena is not scheduled until Oct. 20, but Katrina's
destruction of the city -- as well as the lives,
jobs and possessions of much of the Hornets'
fan base -- makes it extremely unlikely the
team will play at its normal home anytime soon.
NBA Deputy Commissioner Russ Granik recently
sent an e-mail to the league's 29 other franchises
that asked teams to prepare for the possibility
that the Hornets would have to move.
"Even if the arena is operable, it still
may be impossible to play games in New Orleans
for some time," read the message, according
to a report published in The New York Times.
The Review-Journal reported this week that
UNLV has offered its Thomas & Mack Center
to host some Hornets games in the coming season,
and Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett also said
his city's 19,675 -seat Ford Center could accommodate
the team, the Associated Press reported.
Published reports also suggested the 14,164-seat
Pete Maravich Assembly Center at Louisiana State
University in Baton Rouge could be considered.
The team's training camp will begin at the Air
Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Shinn's personal history -- like that of his
franchise -- is rife with ups and downs, including
a controversial franchise relocation three years
ago. His past insistence on tax-supported stadiums
could also turn off Southern Nevada sports fans.
The Hornets began play in the NBA's 1988-89
season. In its initial years, the team routinely
sold out North Carolina's 23,698-seat Charlotte
Coliseum as basketball-crazy fans greatly supported
the Tar Heel state's first major professional
sports franchise.
But things soured in the mid-1990s when Shinn
and co-owner Ray Wooldridge traded several popular
players, and threatened to move the team unless
taxpayers chipped in for a new, luxury box-laden
arena.
Shinn's reputation was further damaged when
a younger woman named Leslie Price accused him
of sexual assault during a 1999 civil trial.
Shinn, who was married at the time, admitted
to a sexual encounter with Price, though he
claimed it was consensual.
Court testimony also revealed Shinn had engaged
in a lengthy extramarital affair with a member
of the Hornets' dance team, according to reports
published in the Gaston (N.C.) Gazette newspaper.
Shinn was acquitted in the Price trial, but
the public was less forgiving, particularly
when Price's estranged husband shot and killed
himself soon after the case concluded. The couple
said the dispute with Shinn "strained their
marriage and finances," according to the
Charlotte Observer.
Taking issue largely with Shinn, according
to published reports, voters in Charlotte in
2001 overwhelmingly rejected a $342 million
tax package that would have financed a new Hornets
arena. That step assured the team would leave
the city, and following courtships with several
cities, including Las Vegas, the team began
play in New Orleans in fall 2002, where its
$110 million arena was financed entirely with
public funds.
Even prior to Katrina, the team's stay in the
Big Easy has been difficult. Playing before
the smallest crowds in the NBA, the team earlier
this year was caught inflating its attendance
figures by reselling tickets originally bought
at huge discounts for Shinn's charity account.
Baron Davis, who was the team's best player,
was traded to Golden State in February, a move
that stripped the Hornets of their top box office
draw.
On the court, the team enjoyed its best regular
season in 1996-97 when it finished 54-28 before
falling to the New York Knicks in the opening
round of the playoffs.
Overall, the Hornets qualified for postseason
play eight times in the franchise's 17-year
history. The team enjoyed its best postseason
run in 2001, when it lost a tough seven-game
series to the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern
Conference Semifinals.
The team was shifted to the NBA's Western Conference
at the start of the 2004-05 season, when its
poor 18-64 record caused the team to miss the
playoffs for the first time since 1999.
The franchise's best-known player was arguably
former UNLV standout Larry Johnson, a two-time
NBA All-Star in Charlotte who spent five seasons
with the team beginning in 1991-92.
The team's current roster is devoid of big-name
stars, but other popular ex-Hornets include
Alonzo Mourning, Glen Rice and Tyrone "Muggsy"
Bogues, a 5-foot-3-inch point guard.
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