Los Angeles Clippers president Andy Roeser, who has been with the NBA club since 1984, is to take an indefinite leave of absence starting immediately, the league announced on Tuesday.
The news came three days after the NBA announced that it would appoint a new chief executive to oversee the day-to-day operations of the club in the wake of the racism scandal that led to a life ban being imposed on owner Donald Sterling.
“This will provide an opportunity for a new CEO to begin on a clean slate and for the team to stabilize under difficult circumstances,” NBA spokesman Mike Bass said.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver banned Sterling, the longest-tenured NBA team owner, for life after racist remarks he made in a private conversation with a girlfriend were made public.
The comments, first released by celebrity website TMZ, included Sterling saying he did not want his girlfriend bringing black people to Clippers games or posting photographs of herself on social media with black people.
A firestorm of outrage followed, leading the Clippers players to wear their uniforms inside out in a pre-game warmup before Silver banned Sterling and fined the 80-year-old billionaire US$2.5 million dollars, the maximum allowed under league rules.
NBA owners have also started the process of setting up a vote to strip the team from Sterling — a move that could push him to sell the Clippers, who are likely to attract bids of more than US$600 million, or take the NBA to court in a legal fight that could be bitter and lengthy.
Sterling has a history of litigation, including legal triumphs in controversial matters involving racial issues in past business dealings with his real-estate empire.
Roeser had guided the Clippers for the past week, but had upset many with a statement in the hours after the comments first became public, saying in part the remarks did not reflect Sterling’s true feelings on racial matters before it was certain Sterling had made them.
Sterling later admitted that he made the comments.
On the court, Clippers players overcame the distraction swirling around them to defeat the Golden State Warriors four games to three in the opening round of the Western Conference playoffs.
The Clippers began their second-round best-of-seven series against Oklahoma City on Monday with a 122-105 road triumph over the Thunder and coach Glenn “Doc” Rivers said on Tuesday in Oklahoma that the team was “pretty much focused” on Game 2.
Rivers said the team had finished training on Tuesday before he even learned of Roeser’s departure and he gave the news to his players.
“I told the guys: ‘Just keep playing. We got it. We’ll handle everything,’” Rivers said, adding that Clippers players took it in their stride.
“I think they’ve heard so much stuff lately that they are just moving forward,” he said.
The Clippers’ recent success helped prompt the Warriors to fire coach Mark Jackson on Tuesday.
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