Nothing but net (losses)


I see that Oregon's governor, Tina Ko(hou)tek, enthusiastically signed the law that sets aside $360 million in state money to upgrade the Blazers' basketball arena. Right behind the Guv, squealing with delight, was the awful lame-duck chair of the Multnomah County commission, Jessica Chevy Vega, taking a brief break from inflicting new taxes on the middle class.

Then Tina gave a little lecture to the Portland City Council, telling them that they need to throw nine figures into the pot, too. This is no time for politics, said she, Tina. "Get it done."

I love it when she's so forceful. Get it done, like she does, with her "prosperity council," or her downtown Portland revitalization task farce force. So much done-getting.

It will be amusing to see the City Council book club's reaction. They're eliminating 911 operators' positions for lack of money, but they'll fork over $120 million for the benefit of the billionaire loan shark guy who owns the Blazers? That is going to be a tough sell, and it will only get tougher as we get closer to the fall. Half of the dirty dozen are up for re-election in November.

If I were on the City Council, I'd tell the Blazers that now that they're getting $365 milion from the state, they'll just have to settle for whatever amount of renovation you get for $365 million these days. Put a bird on it and call it refurbished. But that's just me.

Meanwhile, from my friend who's a long, long-time season ticket holder comes the news that the scene at the playoff games over the weekend was pretty sad. Gone was the party atmosphere that used to prevail at such moments. The team was too cheap to give out T-shirts commemorating the playoffs. Indeed, they were too cheap to hand out anything, even little flags for the fleeced sheep to wave, or placards to hold up. "The way the new owners treated fans last night was pretty insulting," wrote the friend, without my asking.

Somewhere around here I've got a Blazers lawn sign that they gave out at the start of the playoffs one year. It's hardly used, as the team's post-season that year was mighty short, and these days they usually don't have a post-season at all.

Of course, the product on the floor this year is turning out to be disappointing, too. In Sunday's game, the Portland team squandered a 17-point halftime lead and lost by 21. The Blazers scored but 35 points in the second half, at home.

They play again tonight in San Antonio, where their season will likely end. Then the spotlight shifts to the Portland City Council chambers, where no one ever fouls out and there's a 24-second clock for saying something stupid.

Comments

  1. Call Dumdum's bluff, and see if he moves the team.

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    1. Where's he going to go? Seattle and Vegas are now off the table. They get expansion teams, which means the owners all get some bucks. Omaha? San Diego? Nashville? Maybe somewhere in South Carolina?

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    2. Bean's Midnight MoversApril 28, 2026 at 4:43 PM

      The league is quietly putting out a story that expansion to Seattle isn't a slam dunk, that maybe they'd rather expand to Vancouver(!) or Nashville or Kansas City and leave Seattle on the table as a bargaining chip. Canzano has been beating this drum for a week or so now.

      Dundon isn't taking the team anywhere. One, he can't afford the expense and two, he wants an arena for himself. Seattle won't be building one for him. Besides the Seahawks will be ahead of the phoenix Sonics when it comes to public funds for a new place.

      So our boy is stuck, just like Memphis, New Orleans, Charlotte, Milwaukee, Sacramento, Dallas, Toronto, and Phoenix. Let's sit back and see if he starts trying to make chicken salad.

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    3. The chicken salad will be $20 extra.

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    4. The largest markets without an NBA team are Tampa, Raleigh, St. Louis, Nashville, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, San Diego, Hartford, and Kansas City. Several of those are proven markets for sports teams. I wouldn't be surprised if the Blazers went to Tampa, Nashville, San Diego, or Kansas City.

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    5. Bean on a car phoneApril 29, 2026 at 8:52 AM

      Dundon wants to own his own arena. Tampa already has one. San Diego LOVED the Chargers but ultimately wouldn't pony up for a football stadium. They're not building an arena for him. And Kansas City is about to lose the Chiefs because THEY won't build a new stadium.

      Nashville already has an arena, as does Pittsburgh.

      There's nowhere for him to go. This is it. The more I think about it, the more I think the professor is on to something. Tell Dundon to take Tina's $325 million, put a bird on the Moda Center, and call it good. He's not getting a better deal anywhere else.

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  2. Disappointing? You expected a playoff run from this team?

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    1. I expected a minimum level of competence. That was not what anyone saw on Sunday.

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  3. I don't care about the blazers and neither does Christine Drazan.

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    1. If she doesn't care about the Blazers, why did Drazan vote for SB 1501, which the governor signed yesterday?

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  4. I love it when the elected brain donors congratulate themselves for spending other people’s money.

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  5. The Blazers made the playoffs for the first time in seven years, beating the consensus of wins by almost 10 games. They had key injuries all season but still won more games. Deni made the all-star game. They are one of the youngest teams in the NBA and still digging out of the huge mess that Neal O'Crap made. And they had fairly poor luck in the (rigged) draft lottery too.

    So far the new owner seems like a dick, but we can outlast him. The amount of money we are wasting on foreign entanglements and welfare to the Billionaire class far exceeds money for improving the arena, but seems we've all given up on caring about those "minor" issues any more.

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    1. I was with you until the last sentence.

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  6. When the owners of a team jerk the cord, the politicians rouse thhemselves and spring into action, which always consists in spending our money on something that produces exactly nothing. It's not as bad as the laothsome arts poll tax pouring money into the hands of lousy artists--but at least the artists "produce" something, even ifthe NGOs giving out the dough don't ever show what's produced to the taxpayers.
    The Blazers problem is that the result of the tax money will be invisible to the vast majority of the mopes in the nosebleed section, since the $$ will go for new booths for the super-rich or expense account crowd. Which the "beat the hell out of the Rich" don't want to talk about.

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  7. Dundon should move the team to Nashville because this city and its fat, underemployed frog suit dipstick population of socialists don’t deserve a team. Portland deserves a kick in the junk.
    That said, you really think dumping “clean energy” (lol) money into the arena is worse than pissing it away on patronage payouts to Verde, APANO, etc.? At least the arena is something I can use. I’d be fine if they used the arts tax $ too. Our choices are 1) arena or 2) the keep lighting our money on fire. That’s reality.

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  8. Yeah...some of us have made the point to them that if you consider yourselves Socialists / Leftists, you're supposed to be opposing a massive giveaway of The Peoples' money to a corporate predatory-lender.
    Whether that's getting-through to this Council remains to be seen.

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