Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups, who was placed on unpaid leave by the NBA following his October 23 arrest on federal charges related to gambling, has reached an agreement to sell his home in Oregon, according to Sean Highkin of Rose Garden Report (subscription required). A listing on Redfin states that the seller has accepted an offer on the Lake Oswego property, which had a $4.275MM list price.
Highkin suggests that the pending sale could be a sign that Billups has accepted that he no longer has a coaching future with the team, even if he’s acquitted on the charges he’s facing. Billups’ next court appearance isn’t until March 4, and the judge in the case has indicated that the trial won’t start until September. Tiago Splitter has been serving as interim coach since Billups was arrested.
Highkin states that Blazers officials may wait until the sale of the team to Tom Dundon’s group becomes official before they announce a final decision on Billups. He adds that the team’s performance under Splitter for the rest of the season will help determine if the new ownership group decides to remove the interim tag and keep him in place or start fresh with a new coaching staff.
Billups is among 31 defendants in a case involving illegal poker games connected to the mafia that were allegedly rigged through the use of doctored shuffling machines, marked cards and tables with built-in x-ray machines. He’s accused of being a “face card” whose reputation helped to attract big-money players to the games, and he could face up to 20 years in prison for each of two charges if convicted.
There’s more from Portland:
- Dundon is nearing an agreement to sell his stake in the Carolina Hurricanes as he gets set to take over the Trail Blazers, multiple sources tell Mike Ozanian of CNBC (Twitter link). Dundon’s shares in the NHL team are being sold at a $2 billion valuation, and he’s buying the Blazers for more than $4 billion.
- Donovan Clingan missed Friday’s game at Detroit with a contusion on his lower left leg and is listed as questionable for Sunday’s contest in Memphis, Highkin tweets. First-round pick Yang Hansen was recalled from the G League in case Clingan is unavailable.
- Deni Avdija‘s 35-point performance on Friday made him the highest-scoring Israeli player in NBA history, per Ethan Rubinson and Toi Staff of The Times of Israel. Avdija has 4,648 career points, six more than Omri Casspi.
I don’t know why they keep saying they had x rays in the tables when if true the x rays wouldnt give anyone a competitive advantage in a game with cards printed on paper. X-rays would go right through them. Might show one of the payers had a bone fracture. That’s about it.
You’re smarter than the average sports journalist. They used LED and cams that see through the felt. They do produce an image that resembles an xray but you’re right. It’s not literal x-rays though.
I read most of the cheating was done through rigged or hacked card shufflers.
Selling the house makes sense. He isn’t going to need it for 20 years
It’s more than basketball and he knows