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NBA commissioner Adam Silver says league considered suspending Suns owner for more than 1 year

Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver was likely spared even stronger sanctioning by the NBA for his racist, misogynistic and hostile words and actions because of one key conclusion by investigators, commissioner Adam Silver said Wednesday.

The law firm that spent nearly a year digging into the situation determined Sarver's use of slurs "was not motivated by racial animus."

Had that not been the case, Silver indicated, Sarver's punishment — a one-year suspension and $10 million US fine — would have been far more severe.

And that, to Silver, is one of the key distinctions between the Sarver case and the one surrounding then-Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling in 2014, when he was banned for life and fined $2.5 million for racist comments.

The NBA had the option of giving Sarver a longer ban than the one-year suspension. The $10 million fine was the maximum allowable, as was the case with Sterling's $2.5 million fine eight years ago; NBA rules on maximum fines were changed in 2019.

Another reason Silver, who was the ultimate decider of the penalty in this case, stopped short of suspending Sarver for longer or even banning him: He said he took into account a number of anonymous details that could not be revealed in the investigative report that was published Tuesday, along with other elements of Sarver's actions in his 18 years owning the Suns and the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury.

"There were these terrible things," Silver said. "There are also many, many people with very positive things to say about him through this process. And ultimately, I took all of that into account in making the decision that the one-year suspension plus the fine was appropriate."

A 10-month investigation into Sarver's behaviour confirmed he had used

Read more on cbc.ca