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Phoenix Suns 2010-11 Media Guide - NBA Media Central

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<strong>Suns</strong> Management<br />

12<br />

Lon<br />

Babby<br />

President of<br />

Basketball Operations<br />

With almost 35 years as a practicing attorney with Washington, DC-based Williams & Connolly, LLP, Lon<br />

Babby brings a wealth of experience as an industry leader in sports and contract negotiations to his new<br />

role as the <strong>Suns</strong>’ president of basketball operations. Identified as one of “Washington’s Top Lawyers” for<br />

media and sports law by Washingtonian magazine, one of the “20 Most Influential Agents” in the nation<br />

by Sports Business Journal and one of the 100 most powerful in sports by The Sporting News, Babby joined<br />

one of the <strong>NBA</strong>’s most storied franchises as only the fourth basketball president in the team’s 43-year<br />

history on July 20, <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

One of the industry’s most successful and well-regarded player agents, Babby brings his unique<br />

perspective of having represented players for 16 years to the management side. Babby entered player<br />

representation in 1994 when he was retained by current <strong>Suns</strong> forward Grant Hill. Together the pair devised<br />

a new model of player representation based on charging players on an hourly basis, rather than the<br />

traditional contract percentage. His principled approach became an alternative that appealed to the elite<br />

“good guy” athletes and his stable of clients grew to include some of the <strong>NBA</strong>’s most respected sportsmen,<br />

including Boston’s Ray Allen, San Antonio’s Tim Duncan, Houston’s Shane Battier and Hill, a three-time<br />

winner of the <strong>NBA</strong> Sportsmanship Award. Babby also represented marquee Major League Baseball players<br />

and the W<strong>NBA</strong>’s Tamika Catchings.<br />

Babby began his career in sports representing first the NFL’s Washington Redskins (1977-80) and then<br />

MLB’s Baltimore Orioles (1979-94). For the Orioles, he was intimately involved in the senior management<br />

of the club. He first served as club counsel and then general counsel, overseeing player contract negotiations,<br />

advertising and marketing contracts, labor issues and general business matters, including the construction<br />

of Oriole Park at Camden Yards.<br />

A graduate of Lehigh University and Yale Law School and former editor of Yale Law Journal, Babby has<br />

served as an adjunct professor of law at George Washington University Law School. He began his career as<br />

a litigator and handled several high-profile cases including the defense of John Hinckley, Jr., who shot<br />

President Reagan. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of<br />

Fame and in 2007 was elected to the Greater Washington, DC Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.<br />

The 59 year-old Babby was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and grew up in Valley Stream, N.Y. He and wife, Ellen,<br />

met at summer camp at age 16 and have been married for 37 years. The couple has a son, Ken (30), who<br />

is a senior executive at The Washington Post Company, and a daughter, Heather (26), who is a marketing<br />

specialist at Saks Fifth Avenue in New York. Ken and his wife Jill have a 2-year old son, Josh.

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