PDA

View Full Version : Olympiakos exits U.S. exhibitions leaving trail of alleged death threat



Mel_13
10-13-2009, 01:49 PM
Olympiakos exits U.S. exhibitions leaving trail of alleged death threat

While Olympiakos lost both of its exhibition games against NBA teams this week, the Greek basketball club was on the verge of escaping the U.S. Tuesday with its uniforms and other property amid an allegation of a death threat.

At the heart of this strange European tour are outstanding U.S. court judgments demanding that Olympiakos pay $1.1 million to American player Chris Morris, who played for the club in 1999, and $410,000 to his American agent Tom McLaughlin.

On Monday another American agent, Gary Ebert, who also represents Morris, filed a report with police in Shreveport, La., alleging that he received a death threat from someone who claimed to be associated with Olympiakos president and owner Panagiotis Angelopoulos. Ebert tells SI.com that the threat followed a phone conversation he had earlier Monday with Angelopoloulos. Ebert says he then received a call from a man with a Greek accent.

"I got a phone call from a Greek cell phone number," says Ebert. "The guy was going off on me to leave Angelopolous alone. I told him I'm going to get the money [owed to Morris]. The guy said, 'Leave him alone, do this through the court.' I said I have the right to call him. He said, 'Look, (expletive), leave Angelopoulos alone or I'll kill you."

Moments later Ebert called back and told the man he didn't appreciate being threatened. "He didn't have much to say that time," says Ebert. "I think he was surprised I had his number."

Ebert says the federal marshall in San Antonio refused last Friday -- before the Olympiakos-Spurs game that night -- to execute a writ from a federal judge to seize the uniforms, airline tickets and other properties of Olympiakos, in addition to monies carried personally by Angelopolous and the Olympiakos G.M. As a result, Ebert says that he will file a Freedom of Information Act request to discover if anyone might have intervened on behalf of Olympiakos.

After losing Monday to the Cavaliers in Cleveland, Olympiakos was expected to return home to Athens on Tuesday without settling its judgments with Morris and McLaughlin. Ebert says his next move will be to seize upcoming bank transfers to Olympiakos from the Euroleague, which is based in Spain.

"You can write it in blood," says Evert. "I am going to get the money."

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/ian_thomsen/10/13/olympiakos/index.html

Culburn369
10-13-2009, 01:53 PM
Well, by God if the Greeks ain't payin'...I'm certainly not payin' The Dumper.

Mavs_man_41
10-13-2009, 01:58 PM
dammit, i wanna see what kill bill has to say about this!!!

NRHector
10-13-2009, 02:27 PM
dammit, i wanna see what kill bill has to say about this!!!lies american lies:lol

rapliketp
10-13-2009, 05:00 PM
lies american lies:lol

billionaire owners!

Stump
10-13-2009, 05:02 PM
Sheesh. What is it with unstable Greeks?

Bukefal
10-13-2009, 06:05 PM
dammit, i wanna see what kill bill has to say about this!!!


I wonder if KBP was the one making the death threat.

:lol

duncan228
10-14-2009, 06:32 PM
Congressman Questions Stern About Welcoming Olympiacos to U.S. (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=tsn-congressmanquestions&prov=tsn&type=lgns)
SportingNews

On Monday, Greek powerhouse basketball team Olympiacos rolled through Cleveland and was soundly defeated, 111-94. It was, as Olympiacos forward (and former Atlanta Hawk) Josh Childress said, "a great learning experience for us."

But, soon, clubs like Olympiacos might have trouble playing against NBA teams in exhibition games. That, at least, is what Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., seems to favor. In a terse letter sent to commissioner David Stern on Wednesday—a copy of which was obtained by Sporting News—King wrote that several former NBA players have had their contracts breached by European teams.

"It is my understanding that one of those teams, Olympiakos [sic] is currently visiting the United States on a two-game goodwill tour, yet has outstanding U.S. federal court judgments for money owed to past players—a number of whom came from the NBA. For international basketball to succeed, it is imperative that the interests of NBA players both past and present are protected globally," King wrote.

Olympiacos has one of the strongest rosters in Europe, including former NBA players Childress, Linas Kleiza, Andreas Glyniadakis and Von Wafer. There have been no complaints from those players about payment. Former Arkansas standout Patrick Beverley, who played in the Ukraine last year, said, "They treat me great. Trust me, it's better than the Ukraine."

King's beef with Olympiacos and the NBA's welcoming of the team doesn't involve today's players. Rather, it stretches back to former NBA players who have sued the team in the past. One of those, according to a source, is former Notre Dame point guard David Rivers, who became a legendary figure with Olympiacos in the late 1990s when he led the team to a Euroleague championship. Another, the source said, is 11-year NBA veteran Chris Morris, who played with Olympiacos in 1999-2000.

Stern, of course, has no jurisdiction over how (or whether) international teams pay their players. But King does seem to want him to stop allowing NBA teams to play against teams that have stiffed players.

King closed his letter: "I would like to know specifically what the NBA is doing to ensure the fair treatment of American players overseas and why international teams that have unpaid judgments are allowed to participate in goodwill tours here in the United States? [sic] I appreciate your attention to this matter and look forward to your response."

Double-Up
10-14-2009, 07:11 PM
Why does a congressman give a shit about foreign basketball affairs anyways?