Mexico City is going to have an NBA team

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An N.B.A. Team in Mexico City: How Realistic Is That?

By MARC STEIN DEC. 15, 2017


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Fans at Mexico City Arena for the Nets-Thunder game last week. “We are ready now," Mexico City's mayor said about getting an N.B.A. franchise. "We are waiting for that announcement.”CreditFrançois Pesant for The New York Times
MEXICO CITY — The revelation hit Eduardo Najera even as a local celebrity, Edith Márquez, stood at midcourt nearly three hours before tipoff, practicing her rendition of the Mexican national anthem.

Najera, who was the second Mexican-born player in the N.B.A., had just plopped down into a baseline seat at the Mexico City Arena alongside Horacio Llamas, who was the first from the country to play in the league.

He knew he was home as he scanned the scene from floor level, taking in the 22,300-capacity structure that would soon fill for a Brooklyn Nets-Oklahoma City Thunder game, but Najera couldn’t help thinking he was back in Dallas or Denver or another of the five stops in his N.B.A. career.

“This feels like the States,” Najera said.

“You’re right,” Llamas said.

As patriotic as they are, Najera and Llamas — two of just four Mexican-born players to reach the N.B.A. — were clearly pleased that the basketball bustle enveloping them, as the Nets and the Thunder went through their regular warm-up routines, would have seemed authentic in any American outpost on the N.B.A. map.

The two have been in league circles long enough to be well acquainted with the inevitable believe-it-when-we-see-it skepticism back in the United States that greets talk of an actual N.B.A. franchise landing south of the border someday. But they, and others here, are convinced that the N.B.A.’s ramped-up local initiatives — in conjunction with the two regular-season games it staged last week in the Mexican capital — mean Mexico City’s time is coming.
“We’re getting closer to that,” Najera said.

The mayor of Mexico City, Miguel Ángel Mancera, was even more emphatic. In a brief interview in English after a news conference to welcome the N.B.A. on its 25th anniversary trip to town, Mancera said he thought Mexico City could immediately handle its own N.B.A. team.

“Now,” Mancera said. “We are ready now. We are waiting for that announcement.”

Things will not move as quickly as Mancera hopes. N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver is clear about that, noting repeatedly in recent months that his league is not currently considering expansion or the relocation of an existing franchise.

“We have a lot more work to do before we can put a team here,” Silver said.

Yet it is also true that Silver has called expansion inevitable, which helps explain why the N.B.A. has begun exploring the viability of a Mexican franchise as seriously as it ever has. The league recently established its first day-to-day basketball enterprise in Mexico, through a youth development academy, and is pushing to start an N.B.A. G League franchise as quickly as possible, perhaps as early as next season.

It is no mystery why league officials feel compelled to give Mexico — and Mexico City specifically — every chance to prove itself as suitable soil. The country’s proximity to the United States and its capital city’s population in excess of 20 million are impossible to ignore, given what such numbers could mean in terms of new revenue streams and expanding the game’s global fan base.

Silver said a Mexico City franchise could also help grow the sport in the United States, where there are roughly 35 million people of Mexican descent and nearly 57 million Latinos.

“Combined with all those things,” he said, “we play here in Mexico City in the same time zone as the continental United States, so it creates unique opportunities for us in the same way Canada did when we expanded in 1994.”

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notorious traffic and poor air quality, as well as the persistent violence in Mexico in general.

The $300 million arena is in the northwestern borough of Azcapotzalco, one of Mexico City’s 16 such municipalities. Built upon a patch of land formerly occupied by a slaughterhouse, the nearly six-year-old building is most certainly N.B.A.-caliber, but public transportation to it is difficult from much of the city and there is quite a contrast between the modern arena and the dilapidated industrial zone around it. Several residents interviewed complained about traffic, crime and water issues that have plagued the surrounding neighborhood since the arena opened.

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All three teams (Brooklyn, Oklahoma City and Miami) were housed last week in the upscale district of Polanco, one of the city’s most luxurious neighborhoods. Even so, players were required to attend team security briefings almost immediately after arriving at their respective hotels and were frequently trailed by guards as they walked to various restaurants and high-end shops nearby.

Practices for the week were held at The American School less than 10 miles away from Polanco. Many of the students at the international preparatory school are the children of business leaders and diplomats. Armed guards and their bullet-resistant vehicles are ubiquitous.

“That’s always a question for many of the leagues,” said Horacio de la Vega Flores, who competed for Mexico in the modern pentathlon in two Olympic Games and serves now as general director of Mexico City’s sports institute. “There are always questions regarding security. There are always questions regarding mobility. But we have always managed to do things the right way.”

Because of such nagging questions, it is natural to wonder how successful a team in Mexico City could be in terms of courting N.B.A. free agents, given the Toronto Raptors’ longstanding struggles in recruiting players to one of the world’s most cosmopolitan cities — in an English-speaking country.

The altitude and smog would be other major adjustments. Miami guard Goran Dragic said Mexico City’s elevation, which at nearly 7,500 feet above sea level is more than 2,000 feet higher than Denver’s, made it “way worse” than trying to cope with the thin air in a road game against the Nuggets.

In last week’s first game, whether it was the altitude or illness, or a combination, there were players on both sides — most notably Brooklyn’s Allen Crabbe and Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook — who were forced to retreat to the locker room during game action to gather themselves. Crabbe left the floor twice to vomit during the Nets’ come-from-behind victory, while Westbrook felt so ill afterward that he was granted permission to skip the standard round of postgame interviews.

“I think we had like five players under the weather — myself included,” Nets forward Rondae Hollis-Jefferson said of a stomach virus that several in Brooklyn’s traveling party believe contributed to a fourth-quarter fade in its subsequent loss to the Heat.

But the N.B.A. is poised to get a much more detailed sense of Mexico City’s viability and start gathering its own data on the various logistical challenges tied to elevation, traffic, smog and security.

“It’s a perfect opportunity to experiment with a G League franchise,” Silver said.

Throughout much of David Stern’s 30-year tenure as N.B.A. commissioner, talk of the league expanding to Europe was frequent. Now the link between the N.B.A. and its neighbors to the south appears to have more possibility, helped along by an agreement in June 2016 with the Mexican media powerhouse Televisa that brought N.B.A. games to free-to-air television, in addition to the various league broadcasts on subscription channels such as ESPN and NBA League Pass.

The broadcast audience for the two games last week, according to the N.B.A., was estimated to reach more than 31 million TV households.

The closeness between the countries also allows the N.B.A. to take measures that were never possible in Europe, as evidenced by the G League plans. But it will take more; Silver has said Mexico must start producing N.B.A.-level talent more frequently to properly grow the sport here.

“I agree with that,” Llamas said. “The first step is the G League team; hopefully it has lots of Mexican players.”

So perhaps the launch of the league’s new youth basketball and training academy — its seventh such academy globally — will prove to be the pivotal domino in distinguishing the N.B.A. from the many other top sports leagues and organizations (such as the N.F.L., Formula One and Major League Baseball) making frequent cameos here.

“It’s early days in terms of analysis of putting an N.B.A. franchise in Mexico City,” Silver said. “There’s a lot we would need to understand about players potentially living in the market full time and how it would work in terms of teams traveling in and out of the market before we’re ready to present that analysis to the players association and even to our owners.”

As that analysis begins in earnest, unrestrained advocates like Najera — now a scout for the Mavericks — see no harm in dreaming big.

“I want a team, and everybody here wants a team,” Najera said. “We know that we have the economic infrastructure to have an N.B.A. team in Mexico City, and we already have this beautiful arena. I really think we’re getting closer.”




Photo
merlin_131054594_0f56dbc4-5114-4e1d-9522-7ebf14b6377a-superJumbo.jpg

The scene on the street after the Thunder beat the Nets. “It’s early days in terms of analysis of putting an N.B.A. franchise in Mexico City,” the league's commissioner said. CreditFrançois Pesant for The New York Times
The altitude and smog would be other major adjustments. Miami guard Goran Dragic said Mexico City’s elevation, which at nearly 7,500 feet above sea level is more than 2,000 feet higher than Denver’s, made it “way worse” than trying to cope with the thin air in a road game against the Nuggets.

In last week’s first game, whether it was the altitude or illness, or a combination, there were players on both sides — most notably Brooklyn’s Allen Crabbe and Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook — who were forced to retreat to the locker room during game action to gather themselves. Crabbe left the floor twice to vomit during the Nets’ come-from-behind victory, while Westbrook felt so ill afterward that he was granted permission to skip the standard round of postgame interviews.

“I think we had like five players under the weather — myself included,” Nets forward Rondae Hollis-Jefferson said of a stomach virus that several in Brooklyn’s traveling party believe contributed to a fourth-quarter fade in its subsequent loss to the Heat.

But the N.B.A. is poised to get a much more detailed sense of Mexico City’s viability and start gathering its own data on the various logistical challenges tied to elevation, traffic, smog and security.

“It’s a perfect opportunity to experiment with a G League franchise,” Silver said.

Throughout much of David Stern’s 30-year tenure as N.B.A. commissioner, talk of the league expanding to Europe was frequent. Now the link between the N.B.A. and its neighbors to the south appears to have more possibility, helped along by an agreement in June 2016 with the Mexican media powerhouse Televisa that brought N.B.A. games to free-to-air television, in addition to the various league broadcasts on subscription channels such as ESPN and NBA League Pass.

The broadcast audience for the two games last week, according to the N.B.A., was estimated to reach more than 31 million TV households.

The closeness between the countries also allows the N.B.A. to take measures that were never possible in Europe, as evidenced by the G League plans. But it will take more; Silver has said Mexico must start producing N.B.A.-level talent more frequently to properly grow the sport here.

“I agree with that,” Llamas said. “The first step is the G League team; hopefully it has lots of Mexican players.”

So perhaps the launch of the league’s new youth basketball and training academy — its seventh such academy globally — will prove to be the pivotal domino in distinguishing the N.B.A. from the many other top sports leagues and organizations (such as the N.F.L., Formula One and Major League Baseball) making frequent cameos here.

“It’s early days in terms of analysis of putting an N.B.A. franchise in Mexico City,” Silver said. “There’s a lot we would need to understand about players potentially living in the market full time and how it would work in terms of teams traveling in and out of the market before we’re ready to present that analysis to the players association and even to our owners.”

As that analysis begins in earnest, unrestrained advocates like Najera — now a scout for the Mavericks — see no harm in dreaming big.

“I want a team, and everybody here wants a team,” Najera said. “We know that we have the economic infrastructure to have an N.B.A. team in Mexico City, and we already have this beautiful arena. I really think we’re getting closer.”
 
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