City makes $33.5M deal to keep Indiana Pacers

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The city has negotiated a short-term deal to keep the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis, a pact that provides the franchise
$33.5 million over three seasons.

That includes $10 million per year for Conseco Fieldhouse operating expenses. The city also agreed to provide at least $3.5
million but not more than $8.2 million for capital improvements at the nearly 11-year-old venue, according to a summary of
the deal provided to IBJ.

The $10-million-a-year subsidy falls short of what the NBA franchise had sought. The Pacers had wanted the city’s Capital
Improvement Board to take over $15 million in annual fieldhouse operating expenses.

The deal requires that the Pacers continue to play their home games in Conseco Fieldhouse for the next three years. It also
stipulates that the team cannot terminate its 1999 fieldhouse lease during that time.

After three years, the team could leave if annual losses exceed $2 million, as already permitted under the 1999 agreement.
But it would have to repay a portion of the $30 million, plus pay a multi-million-dollar lease-termination fee spelled out
in the original lease. The portion of the $30 million the team would have to repay would decline annually until the lease
expires in 2019. At that point, the team would not have to repay any of the subsidy.

Representatives of the city, which owns the arena, had been in negotiations with Pacers officials for months. Mayor Greg
Ballard’s administration has scheduled a press conference for 2:30 p.m. Monday to formally unveil the agreement.

During negotiations, Pacers Sports & Entertainment—which is owned by retired real estate executive Herb Simon—contended
it has been in the red every year but one since moving into Conseco Fieldhouse and could no longer afford to pay to operate
the facility.

A CIB-commissioned study concluded that the Pacers along with the Indiana Fever contribute an estimated $55 million a year
to the Indianapolis economy.

City officials had said they wanted to wait until the National Basketball Association and NBA Players Association work out
a new collective-bargaining agreement before signing the Pacers to a long-term lease.
 
The collective bargaining agreement expires in June 2011, and the league’s owners and players union are just beginning
negotiations.
 

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