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WILL DISCORD AMONG ROCKETS, AUTHORITY THREATEN ARENA DEAL?

          A day after the Rockets said they had a deal on a $175M
     downtown arena, the Harris County-Houston Sports Authority
     "balked at going along" with the plan, according to Eric
     Berger of the HOUSTON CHRONICLE.  Rockets COO George
     Postolos: "We stand ready to honor the bargain we struck
     with the sports authority, and we hope and expect that the
     sports authority will do the same."  But the team's decision
     to OK the arena plan and "effectively end negotiations set
     off a political firestorm" yesterday.  Sports Authority
     Chair Billy Burge: "I am concerned about the timing of the
     (Rockets') announcement, as there are still issues
     outstanding between the parties to the agreement."  However,
     Berger notes that other Sports Authority members, including
     Finance Committee Chair Ric Campo, "agreed with Postolos
     that the business agreement had taken its final form."  One
     sticking point could be the choice of an architect for the
     arena's design, which is supposed to be a "joint selection"
     between the team and the Sports Authority.  The issue
     "remains contentious" because the Rockets prefer K.C.-based
     HOK Sports, which designed Enron Field, while "some sports
     authority members do not want HOK because of perceived
     problems with Enron's design" (HOUSTON CHRONICLE, 7/14). 
     Also in Houston, Fran Blinebury writes while the current
     arena deal is not the "best of all possible deals for the
     city and the county," it is a "better deal than the last
     one."  The team's annual rent payments of $8.5M over 30
     years for use of the arena "are the equivalent" of $105M in
     "present-day value, an increased contribution" of $25M by
     the team (HOUSTON CHRONICLE, 7/14).

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