http://www.sacbee.com/2013/05/06/5398439/sacramento-kings-dallas-ranadive.html" In a move that surely strengthens their bid for the Kings, the investors trying to keep the team in Sacramento told the NBA they'd stop taking revenue-sharing dollars earmarked for the league's struggling franchises.
By making the promise, the ownership group led by Vivek Ranadive would forfeit $15 million or more in annual assistance from the NBA's wealthier clubs. Ranadive's pledge, to take effect once the team moves into its proposed new arena, bolsters his argument that the Kings can prosper in Sacramento."To me, this is like cutting off your nose to spite your face. Obviously, the prospect of more money in their pockets is an extremely compelling reason for the other owners to choose Sacramento. However, it's all well and good to permanently give up revenue sharing when you have a brand new arena to play in, but 20 years from now, Sacramento will also have
permanently established itself as a second-class citizen.
This is toothpaste that you cannot put back in the tube; once Sacramento agrees to opt-out of revenue sharing, there's no way the rest of the owners would allow a future buyer to opt back in. And Sacramento is not LA or NY or Boston; their only hopes to be on the "maker" side of revenue sharing is if they have a new arena or a really good team.
Disclaimer: I am both a Sonics fan and a Sacramento area (ish) resident; I hoped for Seattle to get a team, but I would prefer that it not be the Kings. That being said, this move is long-term suicide... had this kind of a deal been struck when the Kings moved to Sacramento ~30 years ago, the team would have been contracted in the last 5 years.