Source: China Daily

06-11-2008 11:51

Special Report:   Strong quake jolts SW China

BEIJING, June 11 -- Proposed National Basketball Association games in China this October could raise relief money for earthquake victims in the NBA-mad nation, league commissioner David Stern said on Sunday.

Minutes before the tip off of Game 2 in his 25th NBA Finals as league boss, Stern spoke about several NBA-China links, including parterships for arena construction and possible greater NBA efforts to aid disaster victims.

NBA Commissioner David Stern speaks before the Boston Celtics play
the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals basketball championship
in Boston June 8, 2008. [Agencies]

"We're now looking to see if we can squeeze in a Basketball Without Borders to raise more money, or other exhibition games," Stern said.

"But clearly in conjunction with two games that we hope to stage in China in October in Hangzhou and in Beijing, we will be amplifying our efforts of earthquake relief. This is a terrible tragedy."

The NBA became the first U.S. sports league to play games in China, staging 2004 exhibitions in Shanghai and Beijing. Last October, NBA preseason games were played in Shanghai and Macao.

While it would be unprecedented for China, Stern's mention of an October date would not preclude the possibility of Chinese regular-season games such as those the NBA has staged in Japan in past years.

The NBA and billionaire businessman Philip Anschutz are reportedly near a deal to open up to 12 arenas in China, having already partnered to run the new 18,000-seat venue for basketball at the Beijing Olympics.

"We hope to have other arena announcements soon and an agreement that would cause more arenas to be built," Stern said. "We're looking forward to future development and the opportunities it brings in a very cooperative way."

China has become a hotbed of NBA interest even beyond fans of Chinese NBA stars Yao Ming and Yi Jianlian, who were both injured much of this season but did not slow extraordinary Asian interest in the NBA.

"Yao Ming and Yi have created interest but even as both of them have been injured, we monitored Chinese interest and it's extraordinary," Stern said, joking that Yao's jersey no longer tops Chinese NBA sales "maybe because everybody has one".