Hello Brooklyn wrote:inonba wrote:Hello Brooklyn wrote:Most fans are going to not care about this. I doubt most owners will care.
A lot of teams do stuff like this and just don't get caught. Its been alleged that Joe Tsai gave KD/Kyrie a ton of perks too.
Balmer didn't set up a dummy corporation. He invested in a business that also gave an endorsement to Kawhi. This type of stuff happens all the time.
The only difference is that Kawhi was stupid enough to not actually do anything to earn the endorsement. If he even did one event or made one Tweet there would be really no case against what he did.
Circumvention requires actual proof. And there is still no proof at all that Balmer knew about it.
I imagine that the league may pass reforms on the types of player endorsements players can take. But players union would probably be strongly opposed to it.
Bottom line: It won't set a precedent because this has always been happening. Teams will just be more careful.
Good to know that after 89 pages of content, there's still someone looking for that signed confession.
Implication for Salary Cap Circumvention:
Disproportionate size of Kawhi's contract
No deliverables
Timing with Contract Events
Prioritized disbursement
Timing of Dennis Wong investment
I haven't encountered anyone even come close to providing a reasonable explanation for the above list without implicating a larger crime, not to mention the mountain of evidence surrounding it.
If anyone wants to try, be my guest, but in both criminal and civil investigations, the law often infers intent from behavior and timing, especially when: “No other plausible explanation fits the facts.”
For example, in regards to the Dennis Wong investment: If the league were to try to prove cap circumvention or similar wrongdoing, the alignment (due payment date → missed payment → owner infusion → payment made) is exactly the sort of “temporal correlation + financial flow” evidence they’d want. It doesn’t prove definitively that the infusion was solely for that payment, or that intent to circumvent was admitted, but it's strong circumstantial evidence that it's exactly what happened.
A signed confession? How about any proof at all that Balmer knew or directed any of the money going to Kawhi?
Do you not understand how evidence works?
The law doesn't "infer" things without proof. Please don't tell me how it works or you will look foolish![]()
Everything you have mentioned is purely circumstantial. Its not on Balmer to "prove" why Aspiration did what it did. Its on the league to prove that Balmer was in on it. And so far they have nothing.
Don't take my word for it. Listen to legal expert Michael McCann on the Zach Lowe podcast who came to the same conclusion.
There is simply no way that the NBA is going to give Balmer a serious punishment for something they can't prove he was involved in at all. It won't happen.
The Joe Smith, Donald Sterling and Robert Sarver situations all required direct evidence.
Yet another person who doesn't realize that the NBA doesn't need more than circumstantial evidence to act. This has been posted on this thread many times, this is not a court of law, there is no burden of proof, there is no innocent until proven guilty. Even the appearance of wrongdoing can be enough to levy a punishment according to the CBA. They have a mountain of it already, more than enough to suspend Kawhi or even void his contract, fine the Clippers, and strip picks.