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IS SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL RISKING LOSING WNBA TEAM W/MOVE?

          The Seattle City Council said that the city's WNBA
     franchise "must pay at least" $20,000 a season to play in
     KeyArena, according to Murakami, Stiffler & Bruscas of the
     SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, who write that the move
     "jeopardizes the franchise."  The $20,000 fee is "designed
     to protect the city" if the team doesn't play as many games
     as expected.  The "feud" between the sides "stems from
     lingering bad blood" between the City Council and Full House
     Sports & Entertainment, the Ackerley family company that
     controls the Sonics.  City Council members "believe that the
     Ackerleys reneged" on more than $300,000 in rent for NBA
     games canceled due to last year's lockout.  But Seattle's
     WNBA Senior Dir of Business Operations Karen Bryant said
     that the council's "demand may be seen" by the league "as a
     sign that Seattle doesn't really want the team."  Bryant:
     "There's 10 other cities that want the WNBA who aren't going
     to be saddled with the licensing fee."  City Council
     President Sue Donaldson: "We have had past dealings with the
     Ackerleys and they left us pretty high and dry with the NBA
     lockout, and we wanted to learn from those lessons and send
     a message" (SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 10/12).  Meanwhile,
     the Seattle franchise had about 5,900 season-ticket pledges,
     "well beyond" the league 5,500 requirement.  The team spent
     about $1.5M in marketing (SEATTLE TIMES, 10/11).
          AND IN PORTLAND ...: Portland's WNBA franchise also
     topped the league's 5,500 season-ticket requirement.  Fred
     Meyer and Nike each purchased 500 tickets, Safeway
     contributed $25,000 that "translated into" 200 tickets and
     Gatorade bought 200 season tickets (AP, 10/12).

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