Tulsa group to formally apply for WNBA team

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—With new supporters on board, a group of investors in Tulsa said Thursday they will formally apply to the WNBA to purchase a franchise.

Lead investor Bill Cameron said his group, called Tulsa Pro Hoops LLC, will exercise its option to buy a WNBA team and expected a decision from the league by the end of October. The goal is to have a team in Tulsa for the 2010 season, Cameron told The Associated Press.

“Obviously we are waiting on pins and needles until they tell us,” Cameron said.

Cameron said Scott and Katie Schofield are the latest investors to join the group, which announced in July that it hoped to gain enough financial support to bring a team to Tulsa in 2010.

The league had set a Sept. 1 deadline for Tulsa to get a franchise by next season, but WNBA president Donna Orender later softened that deadline. Cameron said the investor group didn’t want to make the application “until we felt we were at the point where we could make a credible presentation.”

“We’ve been working hard to get there,” Cameron said. “It’s kind of like you just finished your exams and turned in your midterm paper. We’ve still got plenty of stuff to do but there is a sense of accomplishment. We feel good about where we are.”

Phone messages left with WNBA spokesman Ron Howard late Thursday weren’t immediately returned.

The Schofields have roots in Oklahoma, with Katie having played basketball at Bishop Kelley High School in Tulsa. She later attended what is now St. Gregory’s University and Oklahoma State University in the 1980s. The couple lives in the Washington, D.C., area.

“I never imagined when I was growing up playing 6-on-6 basketball that something even remotely close to a WNBA team would ever be reality in Oklahoma and that I would be involved in it,” Katie Schofield said.

Last month, Cameron and fellow investor David Box—both Oklahoma City businessmen—announced that former Tulsa and Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson would serve as the WNBA team’s coach and general manager should the city of Tulsa land a franchise.

That announcement “generated a lot of interest in the team” and allowed the investor group “to put a face on the team so that people understand that we are committed to winning with Nolan and we are serious about this,” Cameron said. “It has helped make this more tangible.”

The Tulsa team would play at the downtown BOK Center.

Besides Box, Cameron and the Schofields, the group of investors includes Don and Pat Hardin, Sam and Rita Combs, Pat Chernicky, Stuart and Linda Price and Paula Marshall, all from the Tulsa area.

Updated Oct 15, 6:14 pm EDT
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4 Comments

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  1. Cenby
    4. Posted by Cenby Mon Nov 9 2:59am EST

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    WHYYYY????
    i understand why the team had to be relocated but i really, really will miss detroit shock..
    so, where's gonna be deanna nolan now?i mean, she's always been a shock.
  2. Trena
    3. Posted by Trena Wed Oct 28 1:57pm EDT

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    I really that Detroit is being replaced by Tulsa. I like the shock in the eastern conference with the dream, sun, libert, etc. so this year is going to be alot tougher to choose the team in the west in 2010 becuz tulsa is being added to western conference.
  3. hank
    2. Posted by hank Tue Oct 20 6:48pm EDT

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    I would name them the Tulsa yawns. Or the Tulsa "shoot me, I'm at a WNBA game."
  4. anil
    1. Posted by anil Fri Oct 16 11:01pm EDT

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    they will be called the tulsa lightning if they decide to follow the sister team concept(LOS ANGELES sparks,PHOENIX mercury,
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