The Timberwolves and their coach left Sacramento late Thursday night for possibly the last time.
Rick Adelman once upon a time called home the arena that many forever will remember as ARCO and whether he returns to coach again next season, the Kings and the NBA might not.
The NBA will decide the matter at its Board of Governors meetings next month. That's when the 30 team owners will decide whether to approve the team's sale to a group that will move it to Seattle next season or instead bless one final-hour attempt to build a new arena in Sacramento with a new ownership group that will keep the Kings in town.
Sacramento's bid to keep its team was strengthened Thursday afternoon when a California billionaire software developer — and Golden State minority owner Vivek Ranadive — emerged as the new lead investor who could boost the city's counter-offer closer to the $341 million deal the Seattle group already has struck with the Kings' current owners, the Maloof brothers.
Ranadive confirmed his participation via Twitter on Thursday, the same day Sacramento city officials surpassed a self-imposed deadline to finalize a term sheet that will build that new ownership group a fancy new downtown arena.
Adelman coached eight seasons in Sacramento, the last in 2006. But anyone who watches arena and team employees greet him every time he returns coaching another team knows that a piece of him stayed there after he coached Chris Webber, Vlade Divac and Peja Stojakovic through five 50-win seasons.
"It's a shame," he said, "because we had so many good memories here."
Back then, the sold-out arena's lower-level wooden floors reverberated with joyous foot-stomping that made it perhaps the loudest place in the league.