SuperSonics owner Clay Bennett testified Wednesday that he made mistakes in dealing with the city of Seattle after he bought the team in 2006.
“We bought this team with grand visions for success,” he said. “Did we do everything right, and did we understand everything there was to understand? Certainly not.”
Bennett began his second day on the witness stand in a federal trial over the Sonics’ lease at KeyArena under friendly questioning from team attorney Brad Keller, and didn’t specify his mistakes. He finished his testimony shortly before noon and was replaced on the stand by team president Danny Barth.
Bennett is also on the Sonics’ witness list, so he may testify again in the final three days of a trial that is to end June 26.
Bennett suggested he misunderstood the region’s political climate. But he also testified he simply wasn’t willing to commit to the things his local advisers told him would be necessary to win government support for a new arena and keep the Sonics in town: make an out-of-pocket contribution toward the construction, and agree to cover cost overruns.
The 48-year-old Oklahoma business tycoon, who received calls of “Liar!” when he entered federal court Monday, also said he’s regretted his failure “to integrate more completely with the people” of Seattle — it’s to the point “I can’t go to games.”
“I’m not real popular,” he said with a rueful smile.
Some fans seated in the rear of the courtroom chuckled.
He said that if U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman forces the team to honor the final two years of the KeyArena lease, it would cost the Sonics $60 million and make it tough to attract good players and coaches to improve from a franchise-worst record of 20-62 last season. The league’s most talented players probably wouldn’t be interested in moving to Seattle for just two years, he said.
He also extolled the virtues of Oklahoma City’s Ford Center, where, he said, the team could make $17 million over the next two years. He cited the “wildly enthusiastic” support for the NBA there when the Hornets relocated temporarily from New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina.
SEATTLE (AP) — —