INGLEWOOD â NBA commissioner Adam Silver spoke for about 30 minutes during Saturdayâs All-Star Weekend media day, addressing potential league expansion, the NBAâs tanking problem, the WNBAâs collective bargaining agreement negotiations and more.
But here in Southern California, the topic of a potential NBA salary cap scandal involving a reportedly secret $28 million endorsement deal between Clippers star Kawhi Leonard and Aspiration, a company tied to Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, has been percolating since first reported by podcaster Pablo Torre in September.
Torreâs investigation suggested the arrangement, which allegedly involved âhush moneyâ for no-show endorsement deals via now-bankrupt Aspiration, was means for the Clippers to circumvent league rules.
When asked about the league probe as to whether the Clippers illegally skirted the salary cap, Silver deflected the question, saying the league had yet to come to a decision on potential punishment, if any, on the Clippers.
âI havenât come to any decisions whatsoever yet on the Clippers matter,â Silver said. âFrom everything Iâve been told, the Clippers have been fully cooperative. But as I said, Iâm not involved day to day of the investigation, and I think, as Iâve said before, itâs enormously complex.â
Silver firmly stated that the investigation and its findings were not purposely delayed while the Clippers host this All-Star Weekend. Wachtell Lipton, the white-shoe Manhattan law firm conducting the investigation, has no deadline from the league to produce its findings.
Silver continued later in his press conference, when asked about punishment for salary cap circumvention:
âI am completely beholden to the (league) constitution and the CBA. I believe in the rule of law. You know, I have broad powers in certain areas, but those are broad powers that are granted to me by those very documents. And I think itâs in a way, I think itâs what makes sports so special that you establish these rules and people are and teams are required to follow.â
Silver said although he did not want to string along cities such as Seattle or Las Vegas and act as if heâs making promises for the citiesâ respective expansion franchise hopes, he did believe the league is currently on the path toward adding teams in the near future.
He said the NBA wanted to get through securing the new collective bargaining agreement, which was agreed to during the offseason, and that now the league can turn its focus to expansion.
âMy sense is at the March board of governors meeting, weâll be having further discussions around expansion process,â Silver said. âWe wonât be voting at the March meeting, but we will likely come out of those meetings ready, prepared to take a next step in terms of potentially talking to interested parties. ⌠It doesnât have to be a two-team expansion, frankly, doesnât have to be any number of teams.â
Silver added that current NBA franchises relocating would not be on the table.
Earlier this week, the NBA fined the Utah Jazz $500,000 and fined the Indiana Pacers $100,000 for roster-related decisions that the league deemed detrimental to winning. Silver said everything is on the table when it comes to finding a way to have fair competition season-long without the product on the court regressing, even agreeing to use the term âtankingâ during his press conference.
He added that the competition committee would view the draft lottery process as an opportunity to change the incentive structure of the league and how to reward winning and losing.
âAre we seeing behavior that is worse this year than weâve seen in recent memory?â Silver said. âYes, is my view, and which was what led to those, to those fines, and not just those fines, but to my statement that weâre going to be looking more closely at the totality of all the circumstances this season in terms of teams behavior and very intentionally, wanted teams to be on notice.â
The NBA is âpaying an enormous amount of attentionâ to the rise of prediction markets, particularly after Milwaukee superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo sparked concern with his investment in Kalshi. Silver didnât find fault with Antetokounmpo â whose shares are a âminusculeâ position, according to Silver â but he acknowledged the looming specter of the gambling industry without suggesting a solution.
âIt concerns me in the totality of all this betting that we need a better handle, no pun intended, on all the different activity thatâs happening out there,â Silver said.
Silver also admitted the overwhelming size of this task, given that roughly 80 countries allow betting on the NBA while billions more are wagered illegally.
Silver said collective bargaining agreement negotiations with the WNBA playerâs association has reached an âunfortunateâ stalemate between the teams and the players, especially considering how the ongoing commercial and public profile of womenâs basketball continues to rise.
âIâve been through so many cycles of collective bargaining, and often things tend to get done at the 11th hour,â Silver said. âWeâre getting awfully close to the 11th hour when it comes to bargaining. Iâm encouraged. There has been more back and forth over the past few weeks.â