"𝕀𝕥'𝕤 𝐁𝙚𝙩𝙩𝙚𝙧 𝙩𝙤 𝙪𝙣𝙙𝙚𝙧𝙨𝙩𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙖 𝙡𝙞𝙩𝙩𝙡𝙚, 𝙩𝙝𝙖𝙣 𝙩𝙤 𝙢𝙞𝙨𝙪𝙣𝙙𝙚𝙧𝙨𝙩𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙖 𝙡𝙤𝙩."

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 "Hey! we had the NBA in Seattle Last Night!!"

#BRINGBACKOURSONICS

 

 

 

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 Mr. Shawn "Reign Man" Kemp, April 93" Beckett Basketball Magazine

 "I got my Shawn Kemp story, when he was rookie, we did a big card show together with this piece, after the show he had to get to the airport they had a game, we rode in the limo to SeaTac singing stuff for me, what a great guy!! BRING BACK MY SONICS PLEASE"

 

If Twitter existed while this man played, he would break it every night
 
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Do us a favor and just put this on repeat
 
 

@KDTrey5 on coming back out to to Seattle before he retires

 When fashion was king 👑

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One of the coldest pictures ever. Damn can’t wait for the Sonics to come back
 
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Bring back the Sonics! 💥
 
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An NBA team in Seattle ‘probably could sell out three years of basketball in one day.’ Fans are still waiting
 
Seattle has a rich basketball history and wants an NBA again. Above, a 1992 game between the Seattle SuperSonics and Golden State Warriors.
SAM FORENCICH—NBAE VIA GETTY IMAGES
 

The outcome of a preseason NBA matchup between the Los Angeles Clippers and the Portland Trailblazers didn’t mean much for the teams, and the crowd didn’t care who won either. For the fans who packed Seattle’s Climate Pledge Arena — hundreds of miles from either team’s home court — it was a chance

to demonstrate how much the city still cares about basketball and, critically, wants a team back after more than a decade without one.

Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell was in attendance. Fans busted out their old green-and-yellow jerseys —  Shawn Kemp’s No. 40 and Gary “the Glove” Payton’s No. 20 — and chanted “Bring back Sonics!”  

“We came to honor Seattle,” said Clippers owner and Seattle native Steve Ballmer, who tried twice to own a local NBA franchise before buying the LA team in 2014. “I have been to thousands of basketball games in Seattle at all levels — it’s possible I even went to close to 1,000 Sonics games. I see enthusiasm at all

levels. Heck yes, a team would mean a lot.”

The city didn’t want the Sonics to leave in 2008, and it’s been lobbying for a return ever since. Of the 15 US metro areas of more than 4 million, Seattle is the only one without a pro basketball franchise. There’s a new arena, and the fans never stopped caring. If anything, in the years since the team left, the appetite

for sports has grown, fed by a pair of Super Bowl appearances for the local Seahawks, the arrival of the NHL’s Kraken and the perennial excellence of the Storm (WNBA) and the Sounders (MLS).

These days, the question seems as much an issue of “when” as “if.” Reports the NBA would expand to Seattle and Las Vegas — where Lebron James made a personal plea to NBA Commissioner Adam Silver for a team — heated up last month after an Associated Press reporter tweeted and then deleted a comment

that the league might make a formal announcement during one of the preseason games in those cities. But in June, Silver said expansion wasn’t on the table “at this time,” and a person familiar with the discussions said it’s likely to stay that way until a new collective bargaining agreement is in place and the league

has secured a media-rights deal to replace the current one, which ends in 2025. 

An NBA team in Seattle “probably could sell out three years of basketball in one day,” said George Karl, who coached the Sonics to the 1996 NBA Finals, where the team lost in six games to Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls. “The streets in Seattle are screaming for the Sonics.”

Seattle’s team would also need a buyer. The region has more than its share of millionaires and billionaires. So far, the Kraken’s owners, David Bonderman, who is the co-founder of TPG Capital, and Hollywood producer Jerry Bruckheimer have expressed the most direct interest.

The SuperSonics’ departure still provokes anger and anguish among fans. With the city refusing public funds for a new arena,  Howard Schultz, then chairman of Starbucks, sold the team to a group led by Oklahoma investor Clay Bennett in 2006. Bennett never bothered putting a Seattle address on his Sonics

business card and two years later moved the team, along with rookie of the year  Kevin Durant.

Seattle held on to the trophies, the retired jerseys and a fierce grudge. When Schultz considered a run for president in 2019, he was met by hometown fan protestors and angry newspaper headlines. Seattle executive, former University of Washington player and one-time Sonics ballboy  Jason Hamilton said the move

was “seeing my childhood go away.” Ballmer, involved in a last-ditch 2008 effort to keep the team, described it as “a dagger in the heart.” 

Meanwhile, the city continues to produce pro-caliber talent. Three of this year’s first-round draft picks hail from Seattle and environs, including top-pick  Paolo Banchero. Players from the area suit up for Denver, Minnesota and Charlotte; Gary Payton II, sometimes referred to as “the Mitten,” now plays a three-hour

drive south, in Portland, Ore. In 20 years in the league, local Jamal Crawford played in practically every part of the country.

“Seattle has a legacy of basketball,” said Jeffrey Shulman, a marketing professor at the University of Washington’s Foster School of Business and host of a 2017 podcast about the Sonics. “But that legacy needs to be nurtured, and the clock is ticking for people to still remember the Sonics and also for the next

generation of basketball talent to have role models and inspiration here in the backyard.”

Having a men’s pro team would also confer economic benefit, particularly because an NBA team would likely use Climate Pledge Arena, solving the problem of public financing. As it is, retail chain Simply Seattle sells more green-and-yellow gear than anything related to any extant Seattle franchise, said marketing

director Joe Munson. Retro starter jackets and a corduroy Sonics hat modeled after the one Payton wore when he was drafted in 1990 fly off the shelves.

Losing the team also left a vacuum in the city’s Black community, said Omari Salisbury, CEO of Seattle media outlet Converge. Players were regulars at restaurants and barbershops in the Central District, Seattle’s historically Black neighborhood, and devoted supporters of events and organizations in the community.

“That was a whole ecosystem that disappeared from our community when the Sonics disappeared,” Salisbury said. It’s a wrong that needs to be righted. “We’re a world class city,” said Salisbury.  “We want to be world class in everything else. Why should sports take a backseat?”

© 2022 Fortune Media IP Limited.


 Throwing it back to October 31, 2007 Where the NBA journey started for @KDTrey5

 

 

🔥 Steve Ballmer's Fiery Pregame Speech in Seattle 🔥

 
 

 

NBA comes to Seattle for preseason game FOX 13 Seattle

Fans filled Climate Pledge Arena to see the Portland Trailblazers against the LA Clippers for an NBA preseason game.

 

What he said. #BringOurSonicsBack #RainCityShowcase @Sonicsgate @Iconic_sonics @SimplySonics @sonicsrising @SeattleSonics @BringBackSonics @NBA

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PACKED house tonight. Seattle IS, always HAS BEEN, & always WILL BE a Basketball Town!! #BringOurSonicsBack

@BringBackSonics @SeattleSonics @Iconic_sonics @SimplySonics @Sonicsgate @Softykjr @PercyAllen206

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NBA Pre-Season in Seattle

Monday Oct.3

FINAL

Portland Trail Blazers POR 97 vs 102 LAC LA Clippers

Clippers star Kawhi Leonard reacts to first game in 476 days

Kawhi Leonard, Clippers, Kawhi Leonard return, Clippers Blazers
 
Kawhi Leonard, John Wall, and Paul George all took the court to lead the Clippers to victory in a close fought #NBAPreseason matchup.
 
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by Tomer Azarly

SEATTLE —  Following a 15-month layoff from NBA basketball, Kawhi Leonard made his return to the Los Angeles Clippers’ lineup on Monday night in the team’s win over the Portland Trail Blazers.

Leonard played just 16 minutes in the win, all in the first half, as the Clippers managed their veteran players’ workloads en route to a 102-97 win.

“It was great,” Kawhi Leonard said on his return to the court. “Just being able to put all that hard work that I did throughout the, whatever, 14, 16 months, just able to put it to test and playing against NBA talent, it was good. Just being out there with the guys and talking, I missed it. It was a great experience for me.”

The two-time NBA Finals MVP finished with 11 points, four rebounds, two assists, and two steals on 3-of-8 shooting from the field. He hit his lone 3-point attempt, which was the game’s opening shot attempt.

“The body feels good,” Kawhi Leonard added. “Obviously, I’m not going to be playing 35 minutes, 38 minutes to start, so it is going to be a little shaky early probably, but it’s a journey, it’s a process and that’s what I’m about.”

A proper training camp and preseason is giving Leonard and the team ample time to build him up. Whether it’s his timing or fatigue, Leonard admitted he’s still not close to where he wants to be.

 Pretty dope to see the Sonics legends greet another Seattle legend, #Respect @GaryPayto @sk40_reignman @Dschrempf #SamPerkins

The Band's Back Together.
 
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Detlef Schrempf @Dschrempf
 
 
“SUPER-SONICS” Chant Breaks Out:

 

Gotta SEA it to believe it #RipCity @ShaedonSharpe

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“That’s going to come. I’m going to be rusty. Legs definitely felt heavy. A lot of lactic acid in them. But as that time goes on, the rhythm will get back, the footwork, the spacing, the timing. Just knowing play calls, getting used to the crowd, getting used to T-Lue calling plays on the fly, my teammates yelling, the

breathing, all that is going to come. I already know that, I know it’s a process and that’s what I am looking forward to.”

Tyronn Lue agreed with Leonard that he seemed a little rusty, but it’s all a part of the process.

“Offensively, Kawhi, I thought he got a little tired. But he got some shots he normally makes. But just seeing him out there on the floor just makes a big difference for our team. So was happy about that. PG is PG, you know, shot the ball well. Defensively was really good. And so with Nico being able to start the game

and guard Dame to start the game, I thought was huge for us as well. So just something we got to continue to keep building off of and going forward.”

Kawhi Leonard says he didn’t have any butterflies when game time arrived and he took the court for the first time in 15 months.

“Nah, It was funny because PG asked me if I had the bubbles before the game, like the stomach and I am like, nah,” Leonard said. “There might be a little wing in there floating around.

“I felt the same way as if I approached any other game today. I felt like I was mentally prepared. I felt like the training staff, the coaches, trainers, doctors, they all did a great job of getting me to this point. It is not over yet. It is still going to be a process for me to get better. I’m just enjoying it.”

 The Clippers have two preseason games left on Oct. 9 vs. the Minnesota Timberwolves and Oct. 12 vs. the Denver Nuggets. With five days and likely four practice days between these, the expectation is that Kawhi Leonard suits up for at least one while participating in most of the practices as well. The exact timeline

will be updated once Leonard make it out of practices healthy.

The last time Seattle hosted an NBA preseason game
 
 
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