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Tuesday 12 August 2014 1:46 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 07 June 2019 2:25 am

Steve Ballmer buys the LA Clippers for $2bn

By: Joe Hall

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Steve Ballmer has wrapped up the $2bn sale of the Los Angeles Clippers.

The stellar US basketball team is now in the hands of the former Microsoft chief executive, as confirmed by a National Basketball Association (NBA) statement. 

The NBA's release was short:

The transaction in which Steve Ballmer purchased the Los Angeles Clippers closed today following the entry of an order by a California court confirming the authority of Shelly Sterling, on behalf of the Sterling Family Trust, to sell the team.
 
The NBA Board of Governors previously approved the sale and Ballmer is now the Clippers Governor.
 
The sale makes the Clippers the most expensive franchise in NBA history, dwarfing the $550m sales of the Milwaukee Bucks and Washington Wizards in 2014 and 2010 respectively.
 
The price is particularly high considering that the New York Knicks, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Chicago Bulls, (who between them have won 24 championships while the Clippers have won none) have been valued at $1.4bn, $1.35bn and $1bn.

Smashing an NBA sale price record would be more understandable if the franchise in question were one of the aforementioned powerhouses of the sport, yet the Clippers are more renowned for failing to escape the shadow left by their LA neighbours, the all-conquering Lakers. The $2bn fee has left many accusing Ballmer of overpaying for his new franchise.

The hefty sum will be the second highest ever paid for a sports team, narrowly behind the $2.15bn paid by Guggenheim Baseball Management for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2012. The Clippers deal will surpass the $1.47bn paid by the Glazer family for Manchester United in 2005. The California-based franchise will also become the only basketball team to feature in the top 10 priciest sporting takeovers.

Just six sports teams in the world have a higher Forbes valuation than the $2bn being stumped up by Ballmer, the 19th richest man in the world. The biggest powerhouses seemingly reside in European football, with Real Madrid, Barcelona and Manchester United topping the list.
 
The New York Yankees (baseball), the Dallas Cowboys (American Football) and the Los Angeles Dodgers are the only American sports teams with a Forbes valuation higher than $2bn.

 

Yet while Ballmer’s bid is undoubtedly bold, there are a number of factors that encourage investment in the NBA. In 2011, a collective bargaining agreement between owners and players saw players’ share of revenue drop from 57 to 50 per cent while the NBA is hoping to double its TV rights deals with ESPN and TimeWarner (currently worth around $930m a year).

Furthermore, there is reason to expect increasing global interest in the league. For example, according to the Chinese Basketball Association, there are currently 300 million people that play the sport in China.

 

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