NBA: Donald Sterling’s wife wants to keep Clippers - report
NEW YORK - Shelly Sterling says she wants to maintain ownership of the Los Angeles Clippers, even though the league is seeking to oust her husband from the team he has owned since 1981.
Clippers co-owner Shelly Sterling told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday (Thursday, PHL time) that she believes she has a legal right to run the team and that the sanctions leveled against her husband, Donald Sterling, don't apply to her.
Shelly Sterling also said she has hired a lawyer to help her with the control bid.
The Clippers are held in a family trust which Shelly Sterling shares 50-50 with her husband, the Times said. In the event one dies, the surviving spouse gets the other share.
Donald Sterling has owned the team for 33 years and in that time its value has skyrocketed from the 12.5 million he initially paid for it. Some experts say the team might be worth up to $1 billion now.
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 didn't 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 Donald Sterling and fined the 80-year-old real estate mogul $2.5 million dollars, the maximum allowed under league rules.
NBA owners 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. Donald Sterling has yet to comment on the leaked tapes but some are expecting him to try and take the NBA to court in a legal fight that could be bitter and lengthy.
Shelly Sterling's continued presence in the organization could prove problematic for the league because, like her husband, she has been accused of making racists comments in earlier lawsuits connected to the family's real estate business, the Times said.
One former Sterling property manager accused Shelly Sterling in a deposition about a decade ago of instructing her not to rent to people that belonged to specific racial groups.
Meanwhile, NBA officials met to discuss the league's bid to strip Donald Sterling of his team on Wednesday (Thursday, PHL time) but have not settled on a timeline for action. - AFP