BOSTON -- Doc Rivers will be the next coach of the Los Angeles Clippers if the NBA approves the rare but not unprecedented trade of an active coach, a Boston Celtics official told The Associated Press on Sunday night. The deal would bring Boston a first-round draft pick in 2015, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is pending a trade call with the NBA office. Rivers, who had three years and $21 million left on his contract with the Celtics, must also reach an agreement on a new deal with the Clippers. Celtics spokesman Jeff Twiss said the team had no announcement. The tentative agreement on Sunday wraps up weeks of haggling over the deal and frees Rivers from presiding over the dismantling of the team that won the franchises record 17th NBA title in 2008. The Celtics and Clippers have also discussed sending Kevin Garnett to Los Angeles in a package with Rivers for draft choices, centre DeAndre Jordan and point guard Eric Bledsoe. But NBA commissioner David Stern nixed those talks this week, saying teams arent allowed to trade active players for a coach. A deal for Garnett could still happen, but the teams would have to convince the league that it was a separate deal. The 37-year-old big man has a no-trade clause in the contract that will pay him 23.5 million over the next two years, but it is believed he would waive it to be reunited with Rivers on the West Coast. He has also discussed retiring. Boston could also cut ties with Paul Pierce, the longest-tenured member of the team, who is due to earn $15.3 million next season; he could be bought out for $5 million. Pierce will be 36 by the 2013-14 opener and showed signs of slowing down this season, when he averaged the fewest minutes per game in his career. Rivers took over the Celtics in 2004 in the midst of the longest title drought in franchise history and -- with thanks to the New Big Three of Garnett, Pierce and Ray Allen -- guided them to the 2008 NBA title. They returned to the NBA Finals two years later, losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games. But the Celtics have regressed steadily since then, twice failing to get past the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference playoffs. This year they finished third in the Atlantic Division -- they had won it five straight times -- and lost to the New York Knicks in the first round. That convinced many that it was time to rebuild -- a process Rivers was reluctant to supervise. If the Celtics unload Garnett and Pierce, that would leave them with point guard Rajon Rondo as their only established star. Rivers had the second-longest tenure of any NBA coach to San Antonios Gregg Popovich, compiling a 416-305 record in Boston that was the third-most wins in franchise history behind Red Auerbach (795) and Tommy Heinsohn (427). He also spent four-plus seasons with the Orlando Magic and is 587-473 in all. Trades for coaches have occurred about a half-dozen times in NBA history, most recently in 2007 when the Heat received compensation for allowing Stan Van Gundy to go to the Orlando Magic. In 1983, the Chicago Bulls sent a second-round draft pick to Atlanta as compensation for coach Kevin Loughery. The Hawks used that pick to take Glenn "Doc" Rivers. Wholesale Fake Air Max 270 . -- Whether Jeremy Hill deserves a prominent role in LSUs offence this early in the season is a matter for debate. Fake Air Max 270 Online . -- Chicago Bears cornerback Tim Jennings was selected Monday to his second straight Pro Bowl, while guard Kyle Long made it after a solid rookie season. http://www.fakeairmax270.com/ . The lawyers filed a 33-page amended complaint Tuesday in federal court in Manhattan, expanding on the suit originally filed Oct. 3 in New York Supreme Court. Arbitrator Fredric Horowitz last week refused to compel Selig to testify in the grievance, and Rodriguez then walked out of the hearing without testifying. Cheap Fake Air Max 270 . The Browns coaching search remains incomplete. Fake Shoes For Sale . Breaking three of his own world records on his way to winning in Paris, Chan silenced the critics and left the audiences standing in appreciation and awe. SEATTLE -- The day had already tested Jeremy Repanichs patience and resolve. And now he was being hounded by a security guard outside the Seattle SuperSonics practice facility because he was unable to produce the credential that proved he worked for the team.The only way Repanich -- a guest relations coordinator -- could get inside the gates on July 18, 2006, was to open the back of his car and show the security guard he was hauling the 1979 NBA and 2004 WNBA championship trophies to a news conference on the Sonics future.I was like, `Oh my gosh, I cant believe I forgot my credential, how am I going to get in? Oh wait a minute, I have the Larry OBrien trophy in the trunk of my car, Repanich said.The day would get stranger and tougher from there.People in Seattle remember July 18, 2006, with bitterness because it was the day the citys first professional sports franchise was sold by Howard Schultz and the Basketball Club of Seattle to Clay Bennett and the Professional Basketball Club LLC based in Oklahoma City. It was the beginning of a process that eventually led two years later to the SuperSonics relocating to Oklahoma City after 41 years in Seattle.This is the story of that 2006 day, as told by some of those involved. Schultz, the CEO of Starbucks and Sonics majority owner at the time of the sale, and Bennett both declined to be interviewed.---Schultz purchased the SuperSonics and Seattle Storm in 2001 and inherited a difficult lease agreement with the city. With the changing economic structure of the NBA, the Sonics financial situation at KeyArena was a problem from the start.After failing to get money from local and state officials for arena upgrades, Schultz decided in early 2006 to explore selling.Sonics president and minority owner Wally Walker: The issue was the arena. That was the unstable part because there was a lease that was expiring in 2010.Walker arrived in France on July 11 for a family vacation. The ownership group was in discussions with Ed Evans, the head of a wireless firm out of Oklahoma City who indicated he wanted to keep the team in Seattle. Less than 24 hours after arriving in Europe, Walker found out an offer was made and Bennett was now at the forefront of the Oklahoma City group.Walker: Our whole ownership group, and some of the management team, had gotten to know Ed over a period of multiple months, but still, we werent anywhere close to a deal. Then, we have a conference call, and now Mr. Bennetts part of the Oklahoma City group.The nine-member executive board of the Basketball Club of Seattle voted 5-4 to sell.I flew back from France on that Sunday, I think it was the 16th, and got together with our management group. We went to a restaurant ... and basically said, `Heres whats going on. I was still in a state of shock.---Kevin Calabro, Sonics play-by-play announcer: We were heading to a tee time ... when I got a phone call and it was from Wally Walker. And Wally said `Weve sold the team. I said, `To who? And he said to Clay Bennett and Oklahoma City.dddddddddddd And I knew immediately who Clay Bennett in Oklahoma City was because they had hosted the Hornets during Katrina for a couple of seasons.Mike Gastineau, Seattle radio host: I had just had a meeting at Pearl Jams warehouse about something, and I got this call from Calabro and he told me and it was announced maybe 10 minutes later or something. And I remember Kevin not being overly optimistic but being `Hey, who knows what is going to happen? I remember hanging up with him and I thought `Theyre gone.Repanich: I was someone who was also manning the phones a lot back then, because we had to talk to season ticket-holders and stuff like that. (One of our communications heads) was like `This is going to be a really horrible day. I cant tell you anymore. But he was getting me ready, mentally ready to be on the phones all day.Walker: This was a brutal day. Of course, besides the fact that the announcement was made, we, and specifically I had a bunch of people to get in touch with, a bunch of, you know, Sonic faithful people that are affiliated with the organization. So Ive got this whole list of people that I called, and also there were politicians. I had forgotten this, but heres a note, I called the Governor.---The sale was formally announced at an afternoon news conference. While there were questions about Bennetts future intentions, the lasting memory was the odd celebratory nature -- complete with green and gold balloons -- of a day that felt so gloomy.Jason Reid, director of the documentary `Sonicsgate: Watching the press conference live and hearing the words that were coming out of Clay Bennetts mouth and Howard Schultzs mouth and being so angry because it seemed so disingenuous to say they were selling to a group of out of town investors and that it was going to preserve the history of this great organization.Walker: That was a bad. It just had a bad vibe to it. Again, Im up on a dais, and Im totally uncomfortable with being there. I wrote my own little thing, my goal was to positively reinforce the things they said that was right about Seattle. ... While I respected the people that I was up there with at that time, I didnt want to be there. And, of course, the balloons.---Nearly two years to the day that the sale was announced, after failed arena proposals, lawsuits and a federal court case that never reached its conclusion, the Sonics and the city reached a settlement that allowed the franchise to move.The time since has been filled with starts and stops in the attempt to get the NBA back to Seattle.Sonics assistant coach Jack Sikma: Ten years is a long time. I guess I overrated the importance of Seattle to the NBA.Hall of Fame coach Lenny Wilkens: I miss the opportunity to be at the game, to see the players here, living here, being part of this community. ' ' '