http://www.freep.com/article/20100119/B ... -slam-dunkPistons' future far from a slam dunk
Speculation flies about whether team and arena for sale. Selling the Detroit Pistons might be the easy part. Word Monday that Karen Davidson might consider selling her late husband William's beloved Pistons created possibilities of a complex combination of potential deals. A person close to the situation told the Free Press on Monday that the Pistons are not for sale now, but could be soon. Such a sale by heirs would not be unusual following the death of such a dominating leader as William Davidson. Adding more complexity to the mix was speculation that a sale could include a partnership with the Ilitch family, perhaps to build an arena that would host the Pistons and the Ilitch-owned Detroit Red Wings hockey team. In the most basic possible formula, Karen Davidson could sell the Pistons and, perhaps separately, Palace Sports & Entertainment, the umbrella group that owns and operates the Palace of Auburn Hills and DTE Energy Music Theatre and manages Meadow Brook Music Festival. The Pistons and Palace Sports & Entertainment are owned separately, and each has its own roster of partners or directors, although William Davidson was the majority owner since he bought the Pistons in the 1970s and built the Palace in 1988.
The Ilitch family owns the Red Wings, Detroit Tigers, the Fox Theatre and Little Caesars Pizza. The family has been reported for many months to be talking to Palace Sports & Entertainment about a possible lease for the Red Wings to play hockey temporarily at the Palace while repairs are made at the aging Joe Louis Arena, which opened in Detroit in 1979.
For several years, the Ilitches have been buying land near the Fox Theatre in moves considered by many to be a prelude to building a hockey arena on the north edge of downtown. For that reason, the notion that the Ilitches might consider moving to a new arena in Oakland County raised several questions:
• Would Canadian hockey fans, not to mention Downriver residents, want to trek up to northern Oakland County to watch the Red Wings?
• Would Mike and Marian Ilitch, civic boosters who moved their business and entertainment empire to downtown Detroit in the 1980s and triggered the construction of Comerica Park for the Tigers, really abandon the city for the suburbs?
Reached Monday morning, longtime Red Wings Senior Vice President Jimmy Devellano said, "I've never heard that, and I know nothing about it, and I talk to the Ilitches all the time." That might suggest that any new arena would be built in Detroit instead of Oakland County. But would potential buyers of the Palace of Auburn Hills be willing to buy that arena knowing that the Pistons would be leaving soon, wiping out at least 40 dates a year for ticket sales, concessions and parking revenue?
Consider: The Memphis Grizzlies basketball team reportedly has been on the market for several years, but owner Michael Heisley can't find a buyer. However, the Pistons would be considered a more attractive option if an owner would control the Palace, too. The FedEx Forum in Memphis, Tenn., where the Grizzlies play, is owned by the city.
If the Pistons continue to play in the Palace after a sale of the team, the venue itself might fetch a good price. On the entertainment front, Palace Sports & Entertainment is the region's most powerful venue operator. The DTE Energy Music Theatre has ranked for years as the country's busiest summer amphitheater, drawing more than 600,000 patrons a year for concerts and other events, while the Palace typically rates high among arenas. Davidson died in March and left an estate estimated at $4 billion. Besides the Pistons and the Palace, his empire included Guardian Industries, one of the world's major glass suppliers. Forbes Magazine, in annual valuations of sports teams, ranked the Pistons as the NBA's fourth most valuable team out of 30 franchises, worth an estimated $479 million. The Pistons trail only the Los Angeles Lakers, New York Knicks and Chicago Bulls in terms of worth. Any sale of the team would be hampered by the recession and worldwide credit crunch. But selling the team by itself would be infinitely easier than trying to put together a deal with the Ilitches that includes the construction of one new arena and the sale of several existing venues.