Los Angeles Times - 02.11.2019

(Barry) #1

LATIMES.COM/SPORTS D5


As the legal fight rages
over the billion-dollar arena
the Clippers want to build in
Inglewood, plans for the
project are moving forward.
The Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration determined
last month that 37 applica-
tions covering the bulk of the
proposed Inglewood
Basketball and Entertain-
ment Center pose no hazard
to air navigation. The green-
lighted structures include a
hotel, parking garages, retail
buildings and signage.
Nine additional applica-


tions are pending for the
900,000-square-foot arena
that would be the center-
piece of the privately fi-
nanced project. The highest
point of the structure near
West Century Boulevard
and South Prairie Avenue
would be 144 feet above
ground and 235 feet above
sea level, according to docu-
ments filed with the FAA.
A spokesman for the de-
velopers said they “remain
confident” the arena will
open in 2024. The lease the
Clippers have to play at Sta-
ples Center expires the same
year.
Though obstruction
evaluations by the FAA are
routine, the complex’s prox-
imity to Los Angeles Inter-
national Airport make the
reviews more than another
box to check.
The stadium for the

Rams and Chargers that’s
under construction across
the street from the proposed
arena came under FAA scru-
tiny in November 2015. The
agency issued a preliminary
report saying the sail-
shaped structure is “pre-
sumed to be a hazard to air
navigation” because of po-
tential interference with
radar tracking inbound air-
craft to LAX.
The FAA approved the
building in January 2017 af-
ter developers agreed to pay
$29 million to install a sec-
ondary radar system at LAX
to resolve the issue.
The arena, which is under
environmental review and
awaiting approval from the
state to fast-track the proj-
ect, faces hurdles unrelated
to the FAA.
Most of them revolve
around ongoing litigation

with owners of the Forum.
The Madison Square Gar-
den Co. believes the pro-
posed arena would “threat-
en the economic competi-
tiveness” of their building
and alleged Inglewood May-
or James T. Butts Jr. tricked
the company into surren-
dering its parking lease for
city-owned land where the
arena would be built. Butts
has denied the claim.
That’s led to a legal battle
between MSG, Inglewood
and Murphy’s Bowl LLC, the
Clippers-controlled com-
pany developing the arena,
that hasn’t shown signs of
resolution. Clippers owner
Steve Ballmer is among at
least 28 people who have
been deposed this year in
connection with the case.
In the most recent twist,
former Butts assistant Mel-
anie McDade-Dickens last

month revised much of her
deposition testimony. The
148 changes — most signifi-
cant adjustments such as
“Yes” becoming “No” — in-
cluded saying she witnessed
the mayor tell an MSG rep-
resentative the city-owned
land could be used for a tech-
nology park. That supports
a key claim by the company.
Inglewood moved to
strike the changes by Mc-
Dade-Dickens while her at-
torney wants to quash an ef-
fort by Murphy’s Bowl to de-
pose her again.
McDade-Dickens had
been on paid administrative
leave from Inglewood since
July 1, according to a court
filing, because of a matter
unrelated to the arena. The
next key date in the litiga-
tion is a hearing on a motion
for summary judgment in
May. Two community

groups also sued over the
project; those cases are on-
going.
Most of the land where
the arena complex would be
built remains controlled by
the city. Plans for the devel-
opment include a 150-room
hotel, offices for the Clip-
pers, facilities for sports
medicine and practice in ad-
dition to retail space.
The arena — with a dia-
mond-patterned roof —
would seat 18,000 people for
basketball games.
“We’re on a path where
we think we can build the
arena, whatever happens in
the litigation,” Ballmer told
reporters last month. “We’re
moving along. Certainly, suf-
fice it to say, I think the other
side is just trying to slow us
down a little bit. But it’s an-
other thing where we’re
grinders.”

Clippers’ proposed arena takes step forward


The FAA determines


structures near LAX


would not interfere


with air navigation.


By Nathan Fenno


Kawhi Leonard put a
hand on Gregg Popovich’s
shoulder as they spoke.
Popovich pointed at the
court as if he was still coach-
ing a player who hasn’t
suited up for him in almost
two years. The coach patted
Leonard on the back of the
neck. Then they parted
ways.
“Our relationship is good,
for the most part,” Leonard
said of the coach who
launched the two-time NBA
champion’s career.
It is so good that the Clip-
pers star, in his signature
understated tone, admitted
after a 103-97 win over the
San Antonio Spurs on
Thursday that he always
looks forward to matchups
against his former team and
coach. The forward showed
just how far removed he is
from his first days as a Spur,
displaying the all-around
game that’s made him a
three-time All-Star with 38
points, 12 rebounds, four
steals and one assist.
As most of his teammates
slogged through the malaise
of playing the second game
on back-to-back nights, a
well-rested Leonard, who
didn’t travel for the team’s
110-96 loss to the Jazz on


Wednesday, opened fire
early and often. He took 32
shots, his career high for a
regular-season game.
“It looked like he was
pretty incentivized,” Clip-
pers guard Lou Williams
said. “Damn sure felt like it,
so I’m glad to have him on a
night like this where I’ve
been on the other side of
those where some guys
come back and play teams
that I’ve played with them
on and they scorch the
team.”
Leonard’s load-managed
legs gained steam as the
game wore on. After 13
points in the first half, which
included one-of-nine shoot-
ing in the second quarter,
Leonard added 25 points in
the second half, with 15 in the
fourth quarter.
“Just keep being aggres-

sive,” Leonard said, “shots
are going to fall. You’re going
to miss and make shots, but
knock down the important
ones.”
Leonard made seven of
nine shots in the fourth
quarter as the Clippers held
off a late rally by the Spurs,
who were held under 100
points for the first time in
the young season.
“We have scorers and tal-
ent and shooters to play well
on the offensive end,” Leon-
ard said, “but I think if we
want to get to the level that
we want to get to, it’s about
us putting on that defensive
hat and coming out there
and shut down anybody
that’s in front of us.”
The 28-year-old learned
the defensive gospel im-
mediately with the Spurs.
His first instructions from

Popovich were to become an
all-league defender. He was
the NBA’s defensive player
of the year by his fourth sea-
son. Then an All-Star the fol-
lowing season. He reunited
with his former coach
Thursday as a two-time
NBA champion and Finals
MVP.
The development still
seems to baffle the man who
started it all.
“When he first came in,
you saw his work ethic and
you look at his physical skills
— his length, his hands, his
size, his strength — so the
next step was how hard is he
going to work?” Popovich
said. “When we made that
trade and drafted for him,
we didn’t know he was going
to be Kawhi Leonard. People
who tell you that are full of
crap.”

KAWHI LEONARDgets a hug from his former head coach Gregg Popovich, who
implored Leonard to concentrate on defense early in his career.

Kevork DjansezianGetty Images

Leonard


relished


Spurs


matchup


The star dialed it up


against his former


team and still left


Popovich marveled.


By Thuc Nhi Nguyen


He was once a member of
the storied Green Bay Pack-
ers.
As such, Casey Hayward
jumped face first into the ex-
perience by jumping fanny
first into the stands — twice.
The first time, he barely
made it.
“There’s a high part of
the wall and a low part,” the
Chargers cornerback said of
Lambeau Field. “You gotta
go to the low part.”
Hayward paused for a
second and then added, “I
thought I had enough ups,
but I didn’t.”
He scored two touch-
downs during his four sea-
sons with Green Bay and cel-
ebrated each with a Lam-
beau Leap.
The first came after he in-
tercepted a pass from Jay
Cutler and ran 82 yards for a
touchdown against Chicago.
After cruising into the end
zone, Hayward made a
slight left turn and headed
for the front row. “I’ve seen
other guys not get up there,”
Hayward said Friday, smil-
ing at the memory of his
near-failure, which occurred
during a Sunday night na-
tional telecast. “A lot of peo-
ple don’t quite make it. The
fans had to pull me up.”
On Sunday, Hayward,
who is in his fourth season
with the Chargers, will play
against the Packers for the
first time, in a venue that fig-
ures to feel a lot like Lam-
beau West.
In fact, with Green Bay
fans forecast to dominate
the crowd at Dignity Health
Sports Park, it wouldn’t be
at all surprising for a touch-
down-scoring Packer to take
a visitor’s leap.
A Dignity Dive?
“They’re going to travel
well,” Hayward said of Pack-
ers fans. “When I used to play
there, it didn’t matter where
we went. Those fans showed
up. I wouldn’t expect any-
thing different this time.”
Hayward and the 3-5
Chargers remain desperate
for victories. They are under-
dogs against the 7-1 Packers
and have little room left to
stumble. They just snapped
a three-game losing streak.
But in a season of general
underachievement for the
team, Hayward has re-
bounded with a perform-
ance closer to his first two
years with the Chargers,
each of which produced Pro
Bowl honors.
“I think he’s a little more
focused this year,” defensive
backs coach Ron Milus said.
“It seems like once you start
making plays, then here
comes another play to be
made. He never really got on
a roll like that last year.”
Hayward had his second
interception of 2019 on Sun-
day in a 17-16 victory at Chi-
cago. He had 11 in his first
two Chargers seasons but
none a year ago.
He also was credited with
defending three passes, his
highest total in that catego-
ry in nearly two years. In 107
career games, Hayward only
twice has had more than
three pass breakups.
“I think I’m on a good
pace, as long as I keep
playing like this,” he said. “I
think I’ve been playing at an
All-Pro, Pro Bowl level. I just
gotta continue it with the
next half of the season.”

Generally assigned to
cover the opposition’s top re-
ceiver, Hayward’s weekly as-
signments can be daunting.
So far this season, only
Detroit’s Kenny Golladay
has caught passes for more
than 100 yards against the
Chargers. And that came on
an afternoon during which
the Lions scored just twice.
Green Bay might be get-
ting Davante Adams back
this week from a toe injury
that has cost him four
games. In his most recent
appearance, against Phila-
delphia, he caught 10 passes
for 180 yards.
If Adams does return, he
and Hayward likely will be
seeing quite a bit of each
other.
“Casey’s focus is just un-
believable,” safety
Rayshawn Jenkins said. “He
makes so many plays for us.”
Hayward, 30, was a sec-
ond-round pick of the Pack-
ers in 2012. After he played
out his rookie contract,
Green Bay decided to move
on without him. He signed
with the Chargers, made his
back-to-back Pro Bowl ap-
pearances and then, in the
spring of 2018, signed a three-
year extension worth up to
$36 million.
Hayward isn’t the most
athletically gifted defensive
back in the NFL or even in
L.A., not with Jalen Ramsey
playing for the Rams.
At 5-foot-11, 192 pounds,
he also isn’t the most phys-
ically imposing cornerback,
but coaches and teammates
praise Hayward’s instincts,
intelligence and prepara-
tion.
Milus said Hayward has
more than enough ability to
be disruptive in those fleet-
ing final moments that de-
termine whether a comple-
tion happens.
“He’s got some sudden-
ness and some quickness to
him that enables him to
make plays,” Milus said. “He
has what we call ‘C.O.D.’ —
change of direction. You
gotta bring something to the
game and that’s what Casey
brings.”
Jenkins, who is in his first
full season as a starter, said
he marvels at Hayward’s
grasp of offenses and dedi-
cation to film study. He said
he aspires to one day reach
Hayward’s level of profes-
sionalism.
Most of all, Jenkins said
Hayward possesses an im-
pressive ability to antici-
pate, as if he knows where
the offensive player is going
just as surely as the offensive
player does.
“His preparation and
understanding is just fun to
see,” Jenkins said. “And he’s
so poised, always. It’s like
watching someone paint a
picture. You’re just there
watching the masterpiece
unfold. It’s crazy.”
Crazy, perhaps, but also
somewhat wasted in this 3-5
start. Because of the Char-
gers’ struggles, faith in them
has wavered.
But Hayward, for one,
understands what heights
still can be reached for those
willing to leap.

Chargers glad


he made leap


UP NEXT

Chargers vs.
Green Bay
AT DIGNITY HEALTH
SPORTS PARK
Sunday, 1:15 p.m.
TV:Channel 2

Hayward, a former


Packer, has become


defensive mainstay.


By Jeff Miller

Stephen Curry will miss
at least three months be-
cause of a broken left hand
that required surgery Fri-
day, the toughest blow yet in
an already difficult season
for the struggling Golden
State Warriors following five
straight trips to the Finals.
Coach Steve Kerr mar-
veled at the run of big in-
juries to star players, two
days after Curry broke his
nonshooting hand in a loss
to Phoenix, but also stressed
he didn’t want his players
dwelling on the negative
with so much season left.
“It’s just insane what’s
happened,” Kerr said. “But
we’ve had a lot of good for-
tune here too.”


BASEBALL


Beltran hired as


Mets’ manager


Carlos Beltran, two
years removed from his All-
Star playing career and with
no managerial experience,
has been picked by the New
York Mets to replace Mickey
Callaway.
Beltran, 42, got a three-
year contract with a club op-
tion for 2023. He played for
the Mets from 2005 to 2011.


Mike Moustakas and
Yasmani Grandal declined
options with Milwaukee, be-


coming free agents. ... Miami
declined a $16-million option
on Starlin Castroand will
pay him a $1-million buyout
to become a free agent. ...
President Trump will host
the World Series champion
Washington Nationals at the
White House on Monday.

Wide receiver Josh Gor-
donjoined the Seattle Sea-
hawks a day after being re-
leased off injured reserve by
New England. Gordon was
among the Patriots’ leading
receivers, with 20 catches for
287 yards and a touchdown
in six games. ... Denver put
quarterback Joe Flacco
(herniated disk) on injured
reserve, ending his season,
and promoted rookie Brett
Rypienfrom the practice
squad to back up new start-
er Brandon Allen. ... With
quarterback Case Keenum
concussed, Washington will
give rookie Dwayne Hask-
inshis first start Sunday at
Buffalo. ... Kansas City
quarterback Patrick Ma-
homes, out last week while
recovering from a dislocated
kneecap, is questionable for
Sunday against Minnesota.
... Philadelphia receiver De-
Sean Jackson, listed as
questionable as he returns
from injury, plans to play for
the first time in two months
Sunday against Chicago. ...
New York Jets cornerback
Trumaine Johnson(ankles)
and center Ryan Kalil
(neck, elbow) have been
ruled out for Sunday against
Miami. ... San Francisco line-

backer Kwon Alexander
(torn pectoral muscle) will
miss the rest of the season.

Top-ranked Novak
Djokovicand No. 2 Rafael
Nadalare on course to face
off in the Paris Masters final
after winning their quarter-
finals in straight sets.
Djokovic beat Stefanos
Tsitsipas 6-1, 6-2 after losing
to the Greek three weeks ago
in the Shanghai quarter-
finals. Nadal had a more de-
manding 7-6 (4), 6-1 win
against 2008 champion Jo-
Wilfried Tsonga. ... Kar-
olina Pliskovaadvanced to
the semifinals of the WTA Fi-
nals for the third straight
year, beating Simona Halep
6-0, 2-6, 6-4 shortly after de-
fending champion Elina
Svitolina completed a near-
perfect group stage.
Pliskova will next face top-
ranked Ash Barty.

Miguel Angel Jimenez
birdied the final two holes
for a six-under 66 and a
share of the first-round lead
in the Invesco QQQ Cham-
pionship in Thousand Oaks,
the second of three events in
the PGA Tour Champions’
Charles Schwab Cup play-
offs. Jimenez won last week’s
opener. ... Rory McIlroy
shot a five-under 67, leaving
him one shot behind Matt
Fitzpatrick after two rounds
of the HSBC Champions in
Shanghai. ... Brendon Todd
shot an eight-under 63 for a
share of the lead with Harry
Higgsand Scottie Scheffler

after the second round of the
PGA Tour’s inaugural Ber-
muda Championship.

No. 21 Arizona suspended
Devonaire Doutrive, a for-
mer Lake Balboa Birming-
ham guard, indefinitely for
violating unspecified team
rules. ... Washington guard
Quade Green, who trans-
ferred from Kentucky in Jan-
uary, will be eligible immedi-
ately after his waiver was
granted by the NCAA. ... The
NCAA denied a waiver re-
quest that would have al-
lowed Tennessee transfer
Evina Westbrook to play at
Connecticut this season. ...
The U.S. men’s and women’s
3-on-3 teams weren’t among
the first eight qualifiers for
the Tokyo Olympics, but did
make the qualifying tourna-
ment that will be held in In-
dia next March.

Navy’s Malcolm Perry
ran for 108 yards and two
touchdowns and threw for
165 yards and a score in a 56-
10 rout of Connecticut.

Zak Brown, the head of
McLaren, said its IndyCar
team will pay James Hinch-
cliffe not to drive for them
next year after driver Pato
O’Wardbecame available.

The National Women’s
Soccer League announced
rule changes that will in-
crease salaries and team sal-
ary caps, as well as add
$300,000 per team in alloca-
tion money to sign top stars.

THE DAY IN SPORTS


Warriors’ Curry out at least three months


wire reports

Free download pdf