Z, be really careful because the arguments your making about Oklahoma City (and I understand that you're not really able to speak freely) sound a lot like what the NHL said when moving teams to places like Charlotte, Nashville, and Atlanta. We all know how well that turned out.
Here's the problem with that scenario - the NHL didn't do a test run first in those cities. Even in the second year when the NBA was openly moving back to NO, the team sold out every game and generated more sponsorship revenue then they ever had in NO. As is, OKC is already knows where the season ticket, suite money, and sponsorship dollars will come from. Those of you who think selling out the building night after night is the key to making money is wrong - season tickets and sponsorship dollars form the backbone of an organization. Individual game, mini-plan, and group sales are just icing on the cake.
It's amazing how little thought you think people have put into this move. I'm freely willing to admit Bennett bought the team with the worst of intentions - to move it to OKC - but he did it because the city had already proven that it could and would support an NBA team. Plus moving an NBA to the south is a HELL of a lot different then moving an NHL team - please, that's a fucking weak comparison.
It's not like the Spurs make money - oh wait, they do. It's not like the Mavericks make money - oh wait, they do. It's not like the Rockets make money - oh wait, they do. Memphis is almost turning a profit and they had their team President leave 1/4 of the way through the season, have an unsupportive ownership group, a front office in complete shambles, and won 22 games. The entire concept of making money in sports is whether you own your arena or if you have a good lease.
In OKC the team will have an awesome lease and already have a supportive fan and sponsorship base. The team is developing in the right way so after the new car smell of 3 years wears off, the team should be at least solid.
I don't think you have as good a handle on David Stern as you pretend to have. David Stern works for the good of the league and the overall owners and at some point it becomes more beneficial to have a team in both Seattle and Oklahoma City than it does in one of the other failing markets that the NBA has already tried to expand into.
Yes I do - Stern doesn't go halfway on anything. He's going to support his owners until Bennett makes the decision to sell. He may very well be telling Bennett to sell every day in private, but he will never publicly flip on an owner. If you can give me ONE example of where Stern went against an owner in a moving situation in the past, I'll eat my words. Literally, I'll print this shit out and put marinara sauce.
I know you want to believe there's going to be a team in Seattle for the next 25 years consecutively, but it's NOT HAPPENING unless Bennett makes the decision himself to do it. Stern will never publicly out him. Bennett's a man of very strong resolve - it's going to take a lot to take a team in his hometown away from him.
The mis-management by Dolan and the Knicks is a horrible comparison to the Seattle situation.
No it's not - I wasn't comparing them. I was simply saying that if Stern is so unwilling to go against a clearly incompetent owner in NYC, then I promise you he barely gives a shit about Seattle. I called one of my friends from the offices last night - in internal polls of our fans, more people said they cared about the black eye the Anuchke Brown Sanders trial had then the Sonics. That's not even a joke - these are NBA fans that were polled, and it was 70-30 in favor of the sexual harassment trial (the NBA has their own Nielsen type fan base - it's 100 fans in all 30 league markets and then the top 50 markets that don't have a team).
People in Seattle and the NW are going to believe that the rest of us truly care about this issue - the fact is we kind of don't. Sure it sucks, but true NBA fans are the only ones outside of the NW who might care, and they are more enamored by the fact that the NBA product itself is better then it has been in two decades.
It sucks - it's just the reality of the situation.