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Sacramento mayor Johnson to present counteroffer for Kings

| January 16, 2013 8:00 PM

Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson is taking his fight to keep the Kings in California’s capital city to NBA owners.

Again.

Speaking at the annual State of Downtown breakfast on Tuesday, Johnson said he has received approval from NBA Commissioner David Stern to present a counteroffer to the league from buyers who would keep the team in Sacramento. He said the city is in a “six-week sprint” to put together a proposal for the NBA’s Board of Governors to consider over a potential sale and relocation to Seattle.

The league’s deadline for teams to apply for a move for the next season is March 1, though that has been extended each of the last two years for the Kings. And both times, Johnson — a former NBA All-Star — has convinced the league that Sacramento could help fix the franchise’s financial woes and secure its long-term home in a new arena.

“We want this to be the final act of a saga that’s gone on for far too long,” Johnson said.

People with knowledge of the situation said last week that a group led by San Francisco-based investor Chris Hansen, who wants to return the NBA to Seattle, has contacted the Maloof family about buying the Kings. They spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because no deal has been reached.

One person said the Kings could sell for more than $500 million, topping the NBA-record $450 million the Golden State Warriors sold for in 2010. Some reports have suggested up to $525 million.

The Kings’ future in Sacramento has been uncertain because the Maloofs and the city haven’t been able to agree on a deal for a downtown arena.

“While I am sensitive to the important role of the news media in informing the public, our position has not changed, we will not comment on rumors or speculation about the future of the Sacramento Kings franchise,” Maloof family spokesman Eric Rose said in a statement Tuesday.

The NBA declined to comment on Johnson’s remarks Tuesday.

Hansen’s goal has been to find a team and restore the SuperSonics name after they were moved from Seattle to Oklahoma City in 2008. He reached agreement with local governments in Seattle last October on plans to build a $490 million arena near the city’s other stadiums, CenturyLink Field and Safeco Field. As part of the agreement, no construction will begin until all environmental reviews are completed and a team has been secured.

Johnson commended Seattle’s efforts to bring the NBA back to the Puget Sound. He just doesn’t want it to be at the expense of Sacramento.

“We have a city and a community that have done every single thing that is required,” Johnson said. “I hope Seattle gets another team. They deserve another team. They didn’t deserve to lose a team in the first place. It just won’t be the Sacramento Kings if we have anything to do with it.”

The Maloofs backed out of a tentative $391 million deal for a new downtown arena with Sacramento last April, reigniting fears the franchise could relocate. The Kings said the deal didn’t make financial sense for the franchise.

In 2011, the Kings appeared determined to move to Anaheim before Johnson convinced NBA owners at a meeting in New York to give the city one last chance to help finance an arena. That pitch bought Sacramento time, before the brokered deal between the city and the Maloofs — negotiated by Stern and league lawyers — fell apart last year.

Johnson said the Maloofs could still “participate in some way” in the new local ownership group “if they want to remain a part of this team and this community.”

The mayor called the potential $500 million to $525 million price tag for the Kings an “outrageous number.” He admits potential buyers he could pull together in Sacramento will not top that figure, but he also doesn’t believe it has to.

Knicks monitoring trash talk: Listen up! Talk trash to Carmelo Anthony at Madison Square Garden and you may wind up on tape.

Days after Anthony’s overreaction to some bad words led to an NBA suspension, MSG chairman James Dolan had listening devices monitoring everything said to and by Anthony, according to a report in the Newark Star-Ledger.

The report Monday said Dolan had two MSG Network audio technicians stationed at opposite corners of the court during Friday’s home game against Chicago. Holding umbrella-shaped parabola microphones, they were told to record Anthony’s interactions and send the tape directly to Dolan himself.

The Knicks did not comment on the report.

Anthony and Boston forward Kevin Garnett exchanged words during the Celtics’ 102-96 victory on Jan. 7. Anthony, clearly thrown off his game and finishing just 6 of 26 from the field, then tried to confront Garnett near the locker room and team bus following the game, and received a one-game suspension from the NBA.

Anthony would not reveal what was said by Garnett, only that it was something he felt a man shouldn’t say to another man.

Lakers 104, Bucks 88: Dwight Howard had 31 points and 16 rebounds, Kobe Bryant added 31 points and host Los Angeles beat Milwaukee.

Nets 113, Raptors 106: At New York, Brook Lopez had 22 points and nine rebounds to lead Brooklyn past Toronto.

Pacers 103, Bobcats 76: Roy Hibbert had 18 points and seven rebounds, leading Indiana at Charlotte.

Hornets 111, 76ers 99: Greivis Vasquez scored 23 points, leading New Orleans at Philadelphia.

Clippers 117, Rockets 109: Jamal Crawford scored 30 points, leading Los Angeles at Houston.

Nuggets 115, Trail Blazers 111, OT: Wilson Chandler hit a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 14.9 seconds remaining in overtime and host Denver beat Portland.