NBA Commissioner Adam Silver Photo via CBS Sports/Getty Images |
Tuesday’s hotly anticipated press conference by National
Basketball Commissioner Adam Silver proved
to be quite the introduction for a man who assumed the post only a few months ago.
"It was the birth of the Adam Silver Era in the NBA,”
said Fordham’s resident sports business expert, Mark Conrad.
Mark Conrad Photo by Janet Sassi |
Conrad, the director of the sports business specialization
at Fordham Business schools, closely watched the conference, in which
Silver announced a lifetime ban and $2.5 million fine on Los Angeles Clipper
owner, Donald Sterling, who was caught on tape making a series of racist remarks
that became public on April 25.
Silver also pledged to take steps to force Sterling to
sell the Clippers, saying he’d do “everything in his power to ensure it
happens,” a move Conrad called “gutsy, direct, and bold.
“By instituting a lifetime ban and the maximum fine, he
signaled that the league will not tolerate this conduct,” Conrad said. “I think
he will win the respect of the great majority of players, fans and
sponsors."
But it won’t be easy.
"The most
difficult aspect of his decision was seeking a forced sale of the team. Three-quarters
of the owners must approve this action, and that’s unprecedented. If that
happens, I think that there is a strong possibility that Sterling will take
this to court."
Conrad was quoted in a New York Times story
on Monday about the Sterling matter:
“It is not easy to force an owner to sell a team,” he
said.
The Sterling tape scandal isn’t the only story Conrad has
been weighing in on these days. Last Friday, he was interviewed by the
Christian Science Monitor for a story on Northwestern’s scholarship football
players, who were voting later that day on whether to unionize. (The players
did vote to unionize.)
Conrad was asked whether the vote “would set the course for
reform” in collegiate sports.
“The system is broken in a number of ways because of the
money involved,” Conrad
said. “Part of it is the amount of revenues, which are about as great as
big-time sports. Athletes seem to feel left out of that pie and want some
additional rights than what they’ve had before. It’s really part of a general
crack in the system that has existed for 50 years in its modern form.”
-Gina Vergel
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