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Sacramento Kings to VIRGINIA BEACH?!?!

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Sources: Sacramento Kings may move to Virginia Beach, arena deal in the works

Posted: August 23, 2012


By Philip Newswanger and Bill Cresenzo

The owners of the Sacramento Kings, an NBA franchise, and officials from Philadelphia-based Comcast-Spectacor are expected to be in Virginia Beach Tuesday to propose moving the team to the resort city and for Comcast to help build and lease a new pro sports arena.

A deal between the Maloof family, which owns the Sacramento Kings, and the city of Sacramento for a $391 million entertainment complex fell apart three months ago and it has been reported that the owners are looking for a city for their franchise.

Media giant Comcast will guarantee a 25-year lease on a new arena, supposedly for naming rights and for broadcasting the games, sources said. Comcast owns NBC and Global Spectrum, which operates arenas and stadiums across the country including the Ted Constant Convocation Center at Old Dominion University.

City officials and the Maloof family are expected to announce Wednesday, Aug. 29, that the Kings will land in Virginia Beach, sources said.

Virginia Beach-based Meridian Group, a marketing communications firm, is expected to handle the public relations for the announcement.

To finance the arena, the Virginia Beach Hotel-Motel Association has indicated it would support a $1 hike in the lodging tax, sources said.

In addition, the Atlantic Coast Conference has agreed to place Virginia Beach on its list as a future venue for college ACC conference tournaments.

A well-known concert promoter – Live Nation – is associated with the deal for the new arena and the team’s relocation to Virginia Beach, sources say.

The new arena will be built across from the Virginia Beach Convention Center, adjacent to the former Norfolk Southern Corp. rail track and a proposed site for a light rail station.

“Comcast, Live Nation and Global Spectrum have come to the city,” Virginia Beach Mayor Will Sessoms said last week. “They would guarantee us a professional sports team if the deal goes through.”

He said the arena would draw people to the area year-round. He would not confirm the team, but said that in a related project, a multi-star convention center hotel, “would probably be built by owners of the team.”

“I think the greatest thing coming out of this is that Comcast and Live Nation are for real,” Sessoms said.

Kevin Johnson, the mayor of Sacramento and a former NBA standout, has tried to keep the Kings in his city. The Maloofs have said they no longer trust Johnson and don’t want to work with him, according to ESPN in April, prior to the deal collapsing.

“You can’t do a deal with somebody you don’t trust,” George Maloof Jr. said, according to The Sacramento Bee. “I don’t trust him.”

Maloof said last week, “We have been approached by several cities over several years about moving the Kings and we will not comment other than that.”

Amid negotiations over the new entertainment complex in Sacramento, elected officials representing the city criticized the Maloofs, saying they’ve turned their backs on the city late in the game, the ESPN article said.

Chris Lehane, executive director of Think Big, the committee formed by Johnson to retain the Kings, compared dealing with the Maloofs to dealing with one of the world’s most inscrutable and widely criticized governments. Lehane, who stepped down from his position in June, at one point, asked U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate the Maloof brothers, according to a USA Today report.

Eric W. Rose, the Maloofs’ spokesman, said: “It is becoming clearer that the foundation of Think Big is built on fabrication and deception. The name of the organization should be changed to Think Big Fraud,” the USA Today article said.

The Kings’ standing in the western conference was the second worst behind the New Orleans Hornets for the 2011-2012 season.

The Kings have played at the Power Balance Pavilion, the Kings’ home since 1985, formerly known as ARCO Arena.

But the Maloof family has complained that the arena wasn’t suitable and demanded a new entertainment complex from Sacramento. The proposed city-owned complex would have been funded mostly by issuing a parking lease to a private vendor. Anschutz Entertainment Group would have been the operator.

The Maloof family also owns the Palms Casino in Las Vegas and other hotels as well as Maloof Productions and Maloof Music.

Hampton Roads has sought professional league sports in the past including major league baseball, hockey and the NBA. In the late 1990s, Norfolk almost became home to a National League Hockey team, but the expansion team ended up in Raleigh.

George Shinn, the owner behind the hockey league team, also considered Norfolk as a site for the Charlotte Hornets in 2002.

The team ended up in New Orleans.





About the Maloofs
The Maloof siblings – George Jr., Joe, Gavin, Adrienne and Phil – run a sports, casino and beer empire that has made them one of the country’s wealthiest and highest-profile families. From New Mexico, the family began building its empire when it started distributing Coors beer in the 1930s. The family’s patriarch, George Sr., died in 1980.

The matriarch of the family, Colleen Maloof, is the chairman of the board of the Maloof Cos. and the trustee of the Maloof estate.

George, Gavin and Adrienne are the most high-profile of the clan, appearing in music videos and on television shows, like Donald Trump’s “Celebrity Apprentice.”

“George (Jr.) is the leading force behind the building and operation of the hottest property in Las Vegas, the Palms, which is owned by the Maloof family, and has become one of the most sought-after destinations in the entertainment capital of the world,” his biography on NBA.com states.

His brother, Joseph Maloof, is the president of Maloof Cos. and oversees a workforce of 3,500. Phil Maloof is a former senator in New Mexico and is executive vice president with Maloof Cos. Adrienne Maloof-Nassif heads the marketing and advertising end of the Maloof Cos. She also appeared on “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.” Reports say she is worth $300 million. Gavin Maloof is vice chairman of Maloof Cos. He became the youngest owner and operator in professional sports when he became owner of the Houston Rockets when he was 24.

About Comcast
Comcast, founded in 1963 and based in Philadelphia, is best known as the country’s largest cable television, phone and Internet service provider. It reported second quarter 2012 revenues of $15.2 billion and revenues of $30.1 billion for the first six months of 2012. The company owns NBCUniversal and a division called Comcast Spectacor, which owns and manages sports and entertainment arenas across the country, including the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia and the Ted Constant Convocation Center in Norfolk. Comcast Spectacor is also the parent for several arena-related companies that provide food, vending and ticket sales services and also owns the Philadelphia Flyers, a National Hockey League Team.

What it could mean for Virginia Beach
If the deal goes through, a sports arena and a major league sports team such as the NBA’s Kings could be the catalyst that sparks several projects that have been in discussion for Virginia Beach over the last few years. Such projects include:

• Construction of a headquarters hotel for the Virginia Beach Convention Center. City officials have said a headquarters hotel will increase the number of groups that would come to meet at the center.

• An entertainment complex at the old Dome site. Officials have been working to bring in an entertainment venue to help the tourism industry as well as enhance the quality of life for local residents.

• Expansion of light rail from Norfolk to Virginia Beach. The city has a referendum on the November ballet on light rail expansion. Property that the city owns – tracks once used by Norfolk Southern – are across from the convention center, where plans are expected to be announced for a sports arena.

• Development of Rudee Inlet has been a long-time goal for the city.

http://insidebiz.com/news/sources-sacramento-kings-may-move-virginia-beach-arena-deal-works

WHAT THE HELL? This can't be true. Can it?
 
That would put Charlotte, Washington and the Kings all within a short drive of each other. Trifecta of crap.
 
Sad day for Sacramento if it happens, which it unfortunately inevitably will. The Maloofs are truly some of the worst owners in professional sports.
 
Sad day for Sacramento if it happens, which it unfortunately inevitably will. The Maloofs are truly some of the worst owners in professional sports.

Cant blame them for moving from a small market team with an out dated arena. They are losing millions of dollars in revenue a year and 100's of millions of dollars in value.
 
Let's do it. Sounds great.
 
I guess it'd be nice for VA Beach to find something to draw people in to the the town out of season.

The population of the town and the area is similar to Sacramento.
 
Talk about a nomad franchise. They aren't an original franchise but they've been around almost as long.
1949-57: Rochester Royals
58-72: Cincinnati Royals
73-75: Kansas City - Omaha Kings
76-85: Kansas City Kings
86-present: Sacramento Kings

Virginia Beach sounds like an awful place for an NBA franchise. It's a tourist area so a lot of the population is not from there or is only there seasonally which is a recipe for uninterested fans. It's nearly impossible to fly there as major airlines do not service that part of the country well and as someone said, Charlotte and DC have teams relatively close. Plus it's ACC country which makes college basketball much more of a draw than NBA basketball. Seems like moving back to Seattle or San Diego would be better options than VA Beach.
 
According to Nielsen's Television Market Estimates, Virginia Beach is not one of the 100 biggest TV markets in the US. That's right, it's a smaller TV market than Toledo, Chattanooga, Des Moines, and Wichita.

Seattle, Tampa, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, San Diego, and lots of other cities make a ton more sense even if not all of them are quite as pretty as Virginia Beach.
 
this was all put together after one of the maloofs watched the in flight movie "field of dreams"
 
It's makes no sense whatsoever. They should just contract the Kings and a couple other teams.
 
From a basketball perspective, Virginia Beach sucks as a location for the reasons already provided. Sacramento hoops fans only have 45 minutes to an hour to get into San Francisco to watch the Warriors play in their state of the art new arena, so that might have had a hand in the Maloofs pulling out of the Sacramento deal.

Blaming Kevin Johnson was below the belt. He did everything he could.

I will stand firm that the biggest influence on this move is the financial package going to the Maloofs. Despite what any bios might read, The Palms in Vegas has been reported to be a losing venture so far. The Maloofs followed the best deal, Al Davis style. I wonder if they will be focusing more money into developing Virginia Beach real estate as well... I know VIrginia doesn't allow gambling, but maybe they can try to pull a Dan Gilbert and sweet talk the voters to change the gambling laws.
 
goddammit why cant san diego have a goddamned basketball team
 
VA Beach is a dump.
 

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