Highlights

Adam Silver Unveils Shocking Truth Behind Team-Sponsor-Player Deals—Why They Might Be More Transparent Than You Think

Adam Silver Unveils Shocking Truth Behind Team-Sponsor-Player Deals—Why They Might Be More Transparent Than You Think

There’s a tangled knot of intrigue wrapping the Los Angeles Clippers, their owner Steve Ballmer, and star forward Kawhi Leonard — all tightly linked through a now-defunct company called Aspiration. What’s cooking here? Aspiration wasn’t just throwing money at the team; it was also paying Leonard directly, with Ballmer invested in that same company. If this web was spun to dodge the NBA’s salary cap rules, the fallout could be massive. But—and here’s the kicker—the lines blur when you start digging into these financial deals, common in U.S. sports where sponsors often back both teams and individual players. NBA commissioner Adam Silver weighed in, acknowledging the league’s limited visibility into the nitty-gritty but seeing no obvious conflict—yet hinting the league might need sharper eyes going forward. Meanwhile, the NBA has engaged top attorneys to unravel this mess, facing allegations of hidden payments meant to top up Leonard’s NBA paycheck. The stakes? High salaries, soaring team valuations, and an investigation that could reshape how these relationships are scrutinized across the league. It’s a suspenseful saga unfolding—and whether it ends in harsh penalties or murky outcomes, the NBA’s spotlight isn’t dimming anytime soon. LEARN MORE

The NBA’s investigation into Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, forward Kawhi Leonard and a now-bankrupt company named Aspiration will center around the three-way relationship between the parties. The company was paying both the team and its star player. Ballmer owns the Clippers and was an investor in Aspiration.

Should the probe uncover a clear attempt by Ballmer to circumvent the league’s salary cap, the punishment handed down by the league will likely be severe. However, the investigation could also return a much blurrier picture regarding a web of financial arrangements and their true intentions.

It’s not uncommon in U.S. sports for a team sponsor to also have an endorsement deal with a player on that team, and leagues like the NBA typically have little insight into the specifics of those contracts. Asked Wednesday about those relationships, and whether the NBA can ever fully monitor them, commissioner Adam Silver said the league didn’t see an inherent conflict in the arrangement.

The Denver Nuggets, for example, used play in the Pepsi Center, and it would have been unreasonable for the NBA, Silver said, to expect Pepsi (which also owns Gatorade) to be precluded from also having individual deals with some of the league’s biggest stars. Second, Silver said many local sponsors see geographical advantages to working with the market’s biggest celebrities, and their deals frequently require a player to be on that specific team.

“We’re first to admit that we can always learn more,” Silver told reporters on Wednesday following NBA board meetings in New York. “The stakes have gotten much higher. Salaries are much higher, and team values are much higher. So maybe there does need to be a new level of scrutiny on some of these things. Those are all things that we’ll look at, but we certainly won’t change the rules, mid-course, in the middle of an investigation.”

The NBA has hired New York-based law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to investigate the relationship between Aspiration, Leonard and the Clippers. A report last week from podcaster Pablo Torre alleged that Leonard was given a four-year, $28 million deal by Aspiration, with sparse or fully non-existent deliverables, as a way to augment his NBA salary. The Clippers and Ballmer have denied any wrongdoing.

Silver told reporters that the burden of proof in the investigation will be on the NBA in the process. If the league is going to discipline a team, player or owner, he said, it will need to be able to prove wrongdoing.

“In a public-facing sport, the public at times reaches conclusions that later turn out to be completely false,” he said. “I would want anybody else in the situation that Mr. Ballmer’s in right now, or Kawhi Leonard for that matter, to be treated the same way I would want to be treated if people were making allegation against me.”

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