Former Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer officially became the new owner of the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday in an estimated US$2 billion deal after months of legal wrangling, the NBA said.
Ballmer said he was “humbled and honored” after the transaction was sealed when a California court order went into effect confirming that Shelly Sterling had the authority to sell the team.
The team went on the block after the NBA slapped a life ban on her estranged husband, former Clippers owner Donald Sterling, who bought the club in 1981 for US$12.5 million.
The action was in response to a video aired on celebrity Web site TMZ that showed Donald Sterling criticizing his girlfriend for having her picture taken with black people.
In the storm that followed, the 80-year-old billionaire initially agreed to the sale of the team, but then abruptly withdrew his support.
However, his wife, Shelly, moved to sell the Clippers as a trustee of the family trust that owned the team after Donald Sterling had been declared mentally incapacitated.
The NBA Board of Governors had previously approved the sale and Ballmer now takes on the title of Clippers governor.
Ballmer thanked Clippers fans for remaining “fiercely loyal to our franchise through some extraordinary times.”
“I will be hardcore in giving the team, our great coach, staff and players the support they need to do their best work on the court,” he said. “And we will do whatever necessary to provide our fans and their families with the best game-night experience in the NBA.”
Ballmer is expected to travel to California later this week and have dinner with head coach Doc Rivers and the players, then meet with Clippers employees and fans at an event on Monday.
Rivers said they can now focus on winning a first title.
“This is an amazing new day in Clippers history,” Rivers said. “I couldn’t be more excited to work together with Steve as we continue to build a first-class, championship organization. I am already inspired by Steve’s passion for the game, his love of competition and desire to win the right way, and I know our players and fans are going to be inspired as well.”
On Monday, the NBA filed a counterclaim in US federal court saying Donald Sterling caused “incalculable harm” to the league.
The counterclaim says that Shelly Sterling signed an agreement three months ago on behalf of the family trust, indemnifying the NBA for any litigation costs in connection with the sale of the Clippers.
The suit also says that similar indemnification agreements are in the league’s constitution and in another document signed by Donald Sterling in 2005. Ballmer’s purchase would make the Clippers the second-most expensive franchise in US professional sports. It is the highest price ever paid for an NBA team.
On July 28, after a three-week trial, Judge Michael Levanas gave the green light to the sale, finding no evidence of a secret plot against Sterling.
Donald Sterling contended he had been duped by his wife into submitting to the medical tests as part of a plot to have him ousted from the trust so the sale could move forward.
Donald Sterling appealed the decision to a court in Los Angles, but it was rejected.
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