Minor League Basketball Team Plans Forum Season.Another day, another new professional sports The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. league. The Los Angeles Stars Los Angeles Stars is the name of three American Basketball Association (ABA) teams based in Los Angeles, California. The first team, formerly the Anaheim Amigos, played their home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena from 1968 to 1970, when it moved to Salt Lake of the ABA 2000 will start playing basketball in December at the Great Western Forum, a venture its owners think can be financially successful in a city that already has the Lakers, Clippers and Sparks, not to mention the UCLA Bruins The UCLA Bruins are the sports teams for University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The Bruin men's and women's teams participate in NCAA Division I-A as part of the Pacific Ten Conference. Athletic alumni Jackie Robinson, Rafer Johnson, Yang Chuan-kwang (C.K. and USC Trojans
The new eight-team league hopes to emulate the spirit if not the success of the long-defunct American Basketball Association
Given that the average cost for a family of four to attend a Lakers game at Staples Center This article has multiple issues: * Its neutrality is disputed. * It may contain original research or unverifiable claims. * It does not cite any references or sources. is more than $400, attaining that second goal seems assured. Whether it is possible to create enough enthusiasm for a minor league team, even at discount prices, remains to be seen. While acknowledging the inherent challenges, team management is confident it can turn a profit. "The Lakers have a great fan base. I know because I helped build it," said Steve Chase Dr. Steve Chase is the current Director of the Environmental Advocacy And Organizing Program in the Department of Environmental Studies at Antioch University New England. He is an activist, organizer, lecturer, and editor. , Stars vice president for business operations Business operations are those activities involved in the running of a business for the purpose of producing value for the stakeholders. Compare business processes. The outcome of business operations is the harvesting of value from assets and a former Lakers marketing executive. "But there are 12 million people in (Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. ). Ninety-nine percent of the people in this market cannot afford to go to see the Lakers. Those 99 percent belong to us." The Stars are owned by Bobby Roberts, a Hollywood producer behind such films as "Death Wish," who put up $55,000 to secure his team's place in the league. Day-to-day operations will be run by his son, Todd Roberts, his business partner Mike Selsman, and Chase. Selsman and the two Roberts may be unknown in the world of basketball, but the team gained some credibility by hiring former Lakers star Jamaal Wilkes Jamaal Wilkes (born Jackson Keith Wilkes on May 2, 1953 in Berkeley, California) is an American former National Basketball Association player who played the small forward position and won four NBA championships with the Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors. as vice president of basketball operations, and former Lakers and Loyola Marymount University Marymount University is a coeducational, four-year Catholic university whose main campus is located in Arlington, Virginia. History Marymount was founded in 1950 by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary (RSHM) as Marymount College, a two-year women's school. head coach Paul Westhead Paul Westhead (born February 21, 1939 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a basketball coach in the WNBA, and a former coach in the NBA and the NCAA. He has coached three different NBA teams, and was also the coach of the Loyola Marymount University men's basketball team during that as coach of the Stars. Westhead coached and Wilkes played on the 1980 Lakers championship team, lead by Earvin "Magic" Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. A new game The 10-man roster will be staffed mostly by players cut from NBA NBA abbr. 1. National Basketball Association 2. National Boxing Association NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (= teams and former college players; a draft will determine each team's rights to available players. The rules will be slightly different than those of the NBA. Zone defense will be allowed and fouling out eliminated. In an effort to speed up the game and increase scoring, teams that steal the ball in their opponents' backcourt and score will get three points instead of two, or four points if shooting behind the three-point line. "Paul Westhead practically guaranteed that the Stars will become the first team in pro basketball history to score 200 points in a game," Chase said. And yes, the ball will be red, white and blue, just like the ones used in the old American Basketball Association. The team will play a 60-game season, with 30 home dates kicking off on Dec. 26. Tickets to the games at the Forum will range in price from $6 to $25. Chase said the Stars need to draw between 4,000 and 5,000 fans per game. "We want to be the second-most popular basketball team in Los Angeles," he said. That is a less-than-subtle swipe at the Clippers, recently labeled "the worst franchise in professional sports" by Sports Illustrated. The Clippers averaged more than 13,000 fans per game last year, their inaugural season at Staples Center. But positioning the Stars as an alternative to the Clippers just might work, even though the ABA season will start with the NBA season already in high gear. "That is, I think, not an unreasonable marketing approach," said David Carter, principal at The Sports Business Group, an L.A. consulting firm. "They're firing a shot over the bow, saying we can compete, but we know our place. They might be able to make a run at making themselves an alternative to the Clippers if the Clippers' season isn't going well into the holidays." The league will have access to the hundreds of talented basketball players who can't make it in the NBA. Although every team's salary budget is limited to $900,000, the average player salary of $90,000 far exceeds that of the other existing minor league basketball organizations, including the two most prominent: the Continental Basketball Association This article is about the American CBA. For the CBA in China, see Chinese Basketball Association. The Continental Basketball Association (CBA) is a professional men's basketball league in the United States. at around $25,000 per player, and the optimistically titled International Basketball Association The International Basketball Association was an organization founded by AmeriSport International President Tom Anderson and based in Winnipeg, Manitoba that operated a minor league professional basketball league for a period of six seasons. , which started last year and pays an average of $50,000. Moreover, both those leagues play for the most part in distinctly smaller markets -- places like Sioux Falls, S.D.; Trenton, N.J.; and Grand Rapids, Mich. -- not the somewhat more glamorous homes of other ABA 2000 teams like Chicago, Detroit and Kansas City. Almost NBA quality The combination of more money and a large media market should help the Stars get the best available talent, although players still could make more money playing overseas in Europe. "We will have players who are within an eyelash eyelash /eye·lash/ (-lash) cilium; one of the hairs growing on the edge of an eyelid. eye·lash n. 1. Any of the short hairs fringing the edge of the eyelid. Also called cilium. from being an NBA player," Chase said. In effect, the ABA is hoping to replace the CBA See Capital Builder Account. as the NBA's developmental league. As in the CBA, an ABA player will be able to jump mid-season to an NBA team if called upon. But that speaks to an inherent flaw with such leagues. How can fans develop an affinity for their home team if the best players are gone mid-season? Developing a fan base means building relationships with players. "You're going to need impact players," said Irv Kaze, general manager of the Clippers in San Diego before the team moved to L.A., and a former CBA commissioner. "How about Dennis Rodman?" That is unlikely, but the Stars are negotiating with A.C. Green, who started last season on the Lakers' championship team but was cut this summer. He has yet to sign with another NBA team, and the Stars hope the 37-year-old Green, who also played for the Pat Riley-coached Lakers of the 1980s, will accept a player/assistant coach role, helping to develop younger players while providing a link to the Forum's glorious past. In an age in which many fans are priced out Priced out The market has already incorporated information, such as a low dividend, into the price of a stock. of attending professional sports, the prospect of affordable pro basketball could be an attractive one. But if the new league can't secure some sort of a national television contract, there is no way it can survive, Carter said. Stars executives said the league is negotiating such a deal right now, and the team is trying to get local radio and cable TV contracts as well. Getting the word out isn't going to be easy, either. For marketing, the Stars have budgeted about $450,000 of the team's total first-year budget of $5.5 million. Most of that marketing budget will go to newspaper ads. Radio spots are likely as well, but don't expect the kind of high-profile bill-board ads that the L.A. Avengers of the Arena Football League put up around town early in the year to draw attention to its debut season. "I'm not going to have the budget to do what (Avengers owner) Casey Wasserman did," Chase said. There is one more roadblock: the NBA's plans for a developmental league of its own, despite a 15-year relationship with the CBA. Still in the planning stages, the NBA minor league could kick off in November 2001, although NBA Commissioner David Stern hasn't given the final go-ahead yet. |
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