Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling was banned from the NBA for life Tuesday, league commissioner Adam Silver announced in a forceful and emotional statement at a news conference in New York. Silver said he would urge NBA owners to force a sale of the team.
Sterling confirmed to Silver that it was his voice on an audio recording made public by TMZ over the weekend, in which Sterling made racist remarks about African-Americans and chided his girlfriend, who is black and Hispanic, for appearing in public with people of color.
The league fined Sterling $2.5 million, the maximum penalty under NBA rules. Sterling, who is worth $1.9 billion, is the longest standing team owner in the NBA. He bought the Clippers in 1981 for $12 million. Forbes estimates the team is now valued at around $575 million.
Silver vowed to do “everything in his power” to urge the 30 teams whose owners make up the NBA Board of Governors to strip Sterling’s ownership of the Clippers and force a sale of the team. The commissioner said he needs the support of three-quarters of the group and that he had the backing of several owners.
“The views expressed by Mr. Sterling are deeply offensive and harmful. That they came from an NBA owner only heightens the damage and my personal outrage,” Silver said. “Sentiments of this kind are contrary to the principles of inclusion and respect that form the foundation of our diverse, multi-cultural and multi-ethnic league.”
The decision was an early test for Silver, who took over as commissioner just over three months ago. The punitive measures against Sterling mark an unprecedented move against a league owner, coming just as the NBA launches into the all-important playoff season. On behalf of the NBA, Silver apologized personally to some of the NBA’s greatest athletes — and specifically to Magic Johnson, who was a target of Sterling’s rants.
Players, teams and owners largely embraced the NBA’s actions against Sterling, with rousing support behind Silver.
Johnson, speaking for former and current NBA players, said he was “very happy and satisfied” with the ruling, and applauded Silver’s “great leadership” in banning Sterling.
Former and current NBA players are very happy and satisfied with Commissioner Silver's ruling.
— Earvin Magic Johnson (@MagicJohnson) April 29, 2014
Steve Nash of the Los Angeles Lakers said it was a “proud day for all of us players.” Basketball great Kareem Abdul Jabbar called Silver’s remarks “so on the mark” and said Clippers fans “will have a lot to smile about.”
The Clippers face their fifth game in the playoff series against the Golden State Warriors Tuesday night in Los Angeles, where activists and civil rights leaders planned to protest outside the Staples Center. Following the NBA press conference, the team released a statement saying the players “wholeheartedly support and embrace the decision.”
“Now the healing process begins,” the statement said.









