Ballmer promises bold Clippers

New Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer has promised the NBA franchise will be bold during his reign.

Steve Ballmer at a press conference.

New LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer has promised the NBA franchise will be bold during his reign. (AAP)

A fist-pumping, high-fiving Steve Ballmer enthusiastically vowed to run a "hard core" NBA franchise that will win championships during a rally Monday to introduce the new owner to Los Angeles Clipper fans.

Wearing a blue Clippers' cap and clapping constantly, the former Microsoft chief executive shouted until he almost went hoarse as he moved quickly through Fan Festival crowd then took the stage at the rally celebrating his new ownership of the club.

"Do we have any Clipper fans here? I can't hear you," he screamed in a raucous style he was known for at Microsoft. "I couldn't be more honoured or excited or fired up to be here."

The US tech tycoon Ballmer paid a record $2 billion for the Clippers in a sale that was confirmed by an American judge last week.

Clippers head coach Doc Rivers and players Chris Paul, Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan joined Ballmer on the stage.

The name of disgraced owner Donald Sterling, who bought the team in 1981 for $12.5 million, wasn't mentioned once during the rally.

Some of the fans had been waiting outside Staples Center arena for four hours before the start of the rally.

Ballmer told the crowd that years ago he had planned to move to Los Angeles after he graduated. But those plans changed when his college buddy, Bill Gates, offered him a job at Microsoft.

He said Monday that he loves Los Angeles and he loves basketball.

"We are going to be bold," Ballmer said. "Bold means we are going to be willing to take risks. If you are not being bold, you are going to be timid.

"We are going to be hard core. Hard core. Hard core. Hard core.

Ballmer lives in Seattle but said he has no plans to move the team to the Pacific Northwest.

"I think Seattle is a town that deserves an NBA team and yet I wanted to move on and get going and this was a phenomenal opportunity," he said. "I love Los Angeles also and that's where the Clippers play."

Sterling, who made his fortune in real estate, came under pressure to sell the team since the release of a tape between him and his girlfriend V. Stiviano. In the recording, Sterling criticised the much younger Stiviano for having her picture taken with black people and told her not to bring them to Clippers games.

Soon after the comments became public, the NBA slapped the 80-year-old owner with a lifetime ban from the league and began the process of stripping Sterling of ownership of the club.


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