armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

Afraidofedhochuli
Voted 2007 ArmchairGM User's choice for "Best NFL Coverage"

http://www.afraidofedhochuli.com

Because thanks to our fear of death in this country, I won't have to die...I'll pass away... - George Carlin

More By Afraidofedhochuli

The State of Seattle
15 votes, 8 comments
Matt's A-Z of Funny Sports Names: NCAA Edition
13 votes, 3 comments
Top 13: Ways to get your friends to watch sports
19 votes, 10 comments
View All

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

The Divorce of the Sonics and Seattle - From the Kids Eyes

by Afraidofedhochuli
created April 11, 2008, last edited February 10, 2009
16
Vote

When I was almost six my parents got divorced. So as to not release anything that could hurt people (yet to be fair and honest), all I will say is that it wasn’t the cleanest split in the world. As a child I wasn’t sure what the deal was, why my Mother was leaving and why I felt as if I was to fault.  


It is no secret that it took me a long time to come to terms with the situation and move forward (and in full disclosure, there are still things that irk me), but I at least don’t feel that I am the one to blame anymore.   This is what the city of Seattle needs to understand: third parties are never to blame when a nasty divorce happens: two entities realize that this isn’t what the best is for them.  


The problem that Seattle fans have right now is that they are stuck in the middle of a split that is getting messy, hurtful and just plain ridiculous. The “divorce” between the ownership (Sonics going forward) and the City of Seattle is getting ugly and the fans are helpless.
 


Yesterday it was brought forth to the world that the Sonics owners – co-owners Clay Bennett, Aubrey McClendon and Tom Ward were lying to the not only the city of Seattle but the NBA and NBA Commissioner David Stern.  


E-mails recovered from dates starting shortly after the State of Washington turned down the Sonics’ request for $500 Million to go to a new arena, stated things that fans believed but no one knew for sure.  


"Is there any way to move here [Oklahoma City] for next season or are we doomed to have another lame duck season in Seattle?" Ward said in an e-mail.  


Bennett then replied: "I am a man possessed! Will do everything we can. Thanks for hanging with me boys, the game is getting started!"  


"That's the spirit!! I am willing to help any way I can to watch ball here [in Oklahoma City] next year," Ward said.  


Then McClendon chimes in: "Me too, thanks Clay!"  


When Starbucks CEO Howard Shultz sold the team to the Oklahoma-based businessmen there were many quotes from Bennett (the head of the new owners) stating that they would make every “effort possible to keep the team in Seattle”.  


This is why the majority of the previous owners chose to sell. They knew they couldn’t afford the team but that the “new blood” might be able to get something done; now they have been lied to.  


The Seattle Times discussed this with former Sonics president and co-owner Wally Walker who stated that he voted against the deal and that the “good faith” that Bennett and his cohorts described during the sale, has been proven a lie. He went further stating: "For the people who voted for the deal, the good-faith, best-efforts promise was a significant factor in supporting the deal. This is not what they signed up for."  


Add to this fiasco the previous quote from McClendon to an Oklahoma paper: “We didn’t buy the team to keep it in Seattle; we hoped to come here.” NBA Commisionser – and Bennett’s friend – David Stern said that if the quote was accurate there would be a “huge fine”. McClendon was soon writing a $250,000 check to the NBA.  


Wait, it gets better.  


Aug. 17th 2007 (four months after previous emails): Clay Bennett send email to David Stern:  


“David you know how I feel about our relationship both personally and professionally. You are among a very few, not withstanding our relative brief actual physical time together that have significantly affected my life. I view you as a role model as an extraordinarily gifted executive, a deep compassionate thinker, and a person with a rare and unique charisma that brings out the best in everyone you touch. You are just one of my favorite people on earth and I cherish our relationship Sonics business aside. I would never breach your trust. As absolutely remarkable as it may seem, Aubrey and I have NEVER discussed moving the Sonics to Oklahoma City, nor have I discussed it with ANY other member of our ownership group. I have been passionately committed to our process in Seattle, and have worked my ass off.”  


Terrible punctuation problems aside, does this "bro-mance" make you feel dirty? What if you knew that in June of 2007 (two months prior to the Bennett/Stern “lovefest”) Tim Romani, an arena consultant for the Sonics, said in an email to Bennett that he would start "reaching out" to Oklahoma City Manager Jim Couch to "engage him in deal negotiations," ( 1)  


Let me go back to this quote of Bennett’s:   “I have been passionately committed to our process in Seattle, and have worked my ass off.”  


Does passionately committed mean proposing a $500 Million arena in Seattle, which you KNOW the government won’t approve? Then stating over and over that Key Arena, even with renovations, is not a viable NBA arena? Does passionately committed mean that once Seattle turns it down, you go to your home town and tell them that a $120 Million fixer-upper of their stadium – Ford Center- will work fine?  


Let’s do a quick breakdown:

Ford Center:  19,675 capacity, 3,380 club seats, seven party suites and 49 luxury suites. $89 Million to build with $121.6 Million coming from the state to build an NBA practice facilty.  

Key Arena: 17,098 capacity, 1,702 club seats, 58 luxury suites. $95.5 Million renovation in 1994.  


Since practice facilities don’t add any seats, let’s just put it this way: Clay Bennett and his co-owners want the city of Seattle to pony up $500 Million to put in 2,577 seats, 1,678 club seats and take out 9 luxury suites. This may be simplistic but let’s say that there are 10 seats in a luxury suite, the differences are 4,165 total seats.  


That comes to a difference of $120,048 per seat. Sorry, Clay Clay but that is not a feasible option.  


This is equivalent to a man and woman who get a divorce, the woman gets the kids and the dog, moves the family to a different state, wants the man to buy them a house, then sues the man and tells the Judge that it is because the man wouldn't pay $120,048 for each nail in the house. 


And who is stuck in the middle? The kids.

From: Afraidofedhochuli

Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
LASportsblogAAA-er
597 days ago
Score 2+-
I still feel bad for Supersonic fans for having this happen to them. But I also feel no remorse because I didn't hear one peep out of Sea-Town until the move seemed almost inevitable. There should of been a city-wide outcry the moment Bennett bought the team. There should of been forethought to realize that an OKC based ownership group buying a floundering franchise after OKC supported the Hornets as a Red Herring. Stern says the Hornets aren't moving to OKC, then Bennett buys the Sonics - that's when Seattle should of gotten the picture, not now.
Permalink | Reply
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 2+-
that is a gross generalization.

Save Our Sonics has been going since the beginning. Your comment shows the extent this has gone to. Every time i wrte about the sonics i get countless comments about how people didn't know.

Mike Gastineau from KJR (radio) said that this is the first year in 17 that he hasn't had a Sonic on. Why? Because the Sonics don't WANT people to know.

There has been outcry since day one. We all knew, but what can people do? Even now, there is nothing that the 3rd party fans can do except watch as 40 years of history load on a bus.
Permalink
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 2+-
the company has cut people off. we used to see billboards and commercials, hear people on the radio...but the Sonics organization has toned it down and they signed a contract with an AM station that has no frequency. I can't get it in my house...and I live downtown. they have cut the fans out of he equation, then they complain that no one is going to the games...
Permalink
SSreportersLegend
597 days ago
Score 0+-
Gas sounds like Softy Mahler at times. Why is everyone letting Howard Schultz slide by this but me? I think he probably also negotiated with those guys how they can move to OK City.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
597 days ago
Score 1+-
If what you are telling me is true (I have to reason to believe it isn't) and Sonics management and the media have been working to keep the outcry out of the public view - then they are truly using the most deplorable of tactics. All I know is that on the regional (west coast) level I haven't heard of serious attempts to keep the Sonics in Seattle until this pre-season.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
597 days ago
Score 2+-
whoops (I have to NO reason to believe it isn't)
Permalink
SSreportersLegend
597 days ago
Score 0+-
Hey, if all else fails..... GO STORM!!!
Permalink
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 0+-
Aubrey McClendon didn't want the Storm because he didn't want: "Those kinds of women in Oklahoma" Deplorable
Permalink
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 0+-
The Sonics used to be on KJR (seattle's one sports station) and they were allowed all access to players. This season the Sonics laid out a rule that they can have one member of the organization a week. ONE A WEEK.
Permalink
SSreportersLegend
597 days ago
Score 0+-
And now it's on KTTH 770.......thank goodness there is no more David Locke.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
597 days ago
Score 0+-
What kinda women? You mean talented, educated, athletic and community oriented women? That is the lowest back-handed way to call a bunch of women "bulldyke" I've ever seen. I'll use another D word, Detestable to describe that scumbag.
Permalink
SSreportersLegend
597 days ago
Score 0+-
Yeah.........I think he is afraid of Lauren Jackson: Jackson_narrowweb__300x445,0.jpg
Permalink
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 2+-
Yeah, this is the kind of (name calling alert) backwoods, hick-crap that we are dealing with. The thing is they are smarter then they act because they have at least cut us all off...

it is so frustrating.

banj.jpg
Permalink
Oh No RomoDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 5+-
Image:MajorLeague.jpg Don't be fooled, we all know she's running the show in Seattle!
Permalink | Reply
AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
597 days ago
Score 0+-
give em the heater!!!
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
596 days ago
Score 0+-
+++++++
Permalink
The PipDiv-I Stud
596 days ago
Score 1+-
The real question is where does the team end up after OKC? And how long before they get there?
Permalink | Reply
KelsdadAll-Star
596 days ago
Score 0+-
Just because a guy buys a team and says he's moving it, it's not that easy. It still has to go to a vote of the league board, (usually comprised of the other owners) who can block the move.

Like with the Montreal Expos, Baltimore owner Peter Angelos threatened to sue MLB for territorial infringement, until baseball wrote him a big, fat check. Same thing could happen in Seattle, Stern could negotiate payments, (several million?) to each team in order to "buy" their vote to allow the Sonics to leave.

On a positive note, there are many people in the New Orleans Hornets organization, including players, who have stated the NBA will never survive in OKC. Maybe the team goes bankrupt, the NBA seizes ownership, leaving Bennett without a team and without his 500 million.

All he'll be left with then is a street corner, a tin cup, and a monkey.
Permalink | Reply
Oh No RomoDraft Pick
596 days ago
Score 0+-
Why a monkey? It's always a monkey! Can't it be a parrott?
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
596 days ago
Score 0+-
It would serve Bennett right - it would be a shame that the real losers would still be Seattle and OKC fans
Permalink
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Afraidofedhochuli | April 11, 2008 | April 2008 | NBA Opinions | Seattle Supersonics Opinions | Oklahoma City Opinions | David Stern Opinions | Tom Ward Opinions | Aubrey McClendon Opinions | Clay Bennett Opinions | E-mails Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Hey ArmchairGM users! Want to help the admins update this news section? Click here to help us out.

Comments of the Day

0 Only because the voters are facking stupid. "Numbers" are...

Play the Quiz Game

How Many Home Runs Short was Fred McGriff from joining the 500 Club

New Articles

How Can Fred McGriff Not Be Elected to the Hall of Fame?
Best African-American Quarterback Ever?
Ken Caminiti: National League's 1996 MVP
Winter Olympics 2010
Highlights from Dubai 7's

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:The_Divorce_of_the_Sonics_and_Seattle_-_From_the_Kids_Eyes"

This page was last modified 20:45, 11 April 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise