
Steve Ballmer Exploring New Arena for Clippers, Could Look Outside California
For the Los Angeles Clippers, "home" has always been more of a rental than a residence. Since 1999, they’ve been shacking up in Staples Center, living in the Lakers’ shadow, their banners swallowed by purple-and-gold dominance. Even when they briefly flirted with relevancy in the early 2000s, they were still just "the other team in LA." And now, Steve Ballmer—Microsoft billionaire, basketball obsessive, and the most caffeinated owner in pro sports—isn’t having it anymore.
The Staples Problem
For a man who built an empire on software innovation, sharing an arena with a more successful brand feels… outdated. Since purchasing the Clippers in 2008, Ballmer has envisioned a future where the franchise is no longer the Lakers’ little brother.
Staples Center, with its sleek downtown design and Hollywood clientele, is the epicenter of LA basketball culture. Except, that culture is overwhelmingly purple and gold. From the championship banners to the crowd that only fills in for Lakers games, the Clippers remain a tenant in a house they don’t own. They don’t control scheduling priority, in-game presentation, or the overall experience. And when you’ve got an owner like Ballmer—someone who likely spent his morning breaking down the angles of Steph Curry’s jumper in Excel—being a second-class citizen in your own home is unacceptable.
Build It or Bolt?
So, what’s the plan? Ballmer wants a new home, one built specifically for the Clippers and their fans. He’s reportedly scouted multiple locations around LA, with Inglewood leading the pack as a prime candidate. The idea: an arena near SoFi Stadium, where the Clippers could finally carve out an identity of their own. But—and this is where things get interesting—sources suggest Ballmer isn’t limiting his options to just California. If LA politicians slow-roll his arena dreams, he’s ready to explore alternatives.
The name that keeps popping up? Seattle.
The Seattle Factor
For the uninitiated, Ballmer’s Seattle ties run deep. He spent decades in the Pacific Northwest running Microsoft. He was one of the biggest names linked to the failed attempts at keeping the Sonics in town before Clay Bennett packed them up and shipped them to Oklahoma City in 2008. If there’s anyone with the money, the vision, and the motivation to bring basketball back to Seattle, it’s Ballmer.
And let’s be real: Seattle is desperate for an NBA return. The Sonics’ departure still stings, and KeyArena (or whatever it’s called these days) is begging for a tenant. If Ballmer doesn’t get his arena in LA, moving the Clippers to Seattle wouldn’t just be a possibility—it might be a priority.
What Happens Next?
For now, the Clippers are locked into Staples, and no official plans have been announced. But when Steve Ballmer wants something, he tends to get it. Whether that means finally securing a Clippers-only arena in Inglewood or shocking the league by relocating to Seattle, one thing is clear: The days of the Clippers playing second fiddle are numbered.
It’s not a matter of if the Clippers leave Staples—it’s a matter of when and where they’ll go next.