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2019

Who Is Mark Stevens? What We Know About the VC Banned for Shoving Kyle Lowry

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At first glance, he looked like an overzealous fan who shoved Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry during an intense Game 3 of the NBA Finals Wednesday.

Turns out he’s not just any fan, but Golden State Warriors minority owner Mark Stevens, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist. As a result, the NBA and the Warriors said Thursday they have banned Stevens from NBA games effective immediately for one year and fined him $500,000 as a result of the incident with Lowry. The ban includes all of next season as well.

Stevens is a managing partner of S-Cubed Capital which he founded after spending 23 years at renowned VC firm Sequoia Capital (he became a managing partner in 1993). While at Sequoia, Stevens played a pivotal role with numerous investments with companies including MP3.com, Pixelworks, and Nvidia. He serves on several boards including Nvidia and Second Spectrum, the latter which provides real-time data tracking of NBA games.

As a partner at Sequoia in the 90s, it was hard not to get immensely wealthy, as the firm placed early bets on companies ranging from Yahoo to Google. Stevens is a longtime benefactor for the University of Southern California, where he attended college and has served on its Board of Trustees. Stevens also has been a co-chair of USC’s Investment Committee and a member of its Finance and Executive Committees.

He’s also the founder and chairman of an innovation center bearing his name. Stevens also serves on the Dean’s Advisory Board of the Harvard Business School. He joined the Warriors in 2013 when former part-owner Vivek Ranadiv? bought a majority interest in the NBA’s Sacramento Kings and had to divest his share of the Warriors.

Wednesday’s incident occurred in the fourth quarter when Lowry dove into the front row at Oracle Arena while attempting to save the basketball from going out of bounds and Stevens, who was two seats away, shoved him. Lowry became irate, and began pointing towards Stevens and made a shoving motion when referees arrived courtside.

Stevens was ejected from his seat and was escorted out by security. Axios first reported that it was Stevens who pushed Lowry. Toronto Star sports columnist Bruce Arthur tweeted that Stevens apparently told Lowry several times to “Go F-Yourself.”

The Raptors won the game 123-109 to take a 2-1 lead in the series as Lowry told reporters during his press conference “there’s no place” for that type of behavior. "He had no reason to touch me. He had no reason to reach over two seats and then say some vulgar language to me,” Lowry said. There’s no place for people like that in our league, and hopefully, he never comes back to an NBA game."

Before Stevens was handed a year-long ban, the Warriors said he would not attend any more games this season. The team publicly apologized to Lowry and was “extremely disappointed” with Stevens’ behavior that “did not reflect the high standards that we hope to exemplify as an organization…There is no place for such interaction between fans - or anyone - and players at an NBA game.”

NBA superstar LeBron James agrees, expressing his concerns on Instagram. The Los Angeles Lakers star and three-time NBA champion said the incident raises all kinds of issues and more swift action should be taken against Stevens.

“When you sit courtside you absolutely know what comes with being on the floor and if you don't know it's on the back on the ticket itself that states the guidelines. But he himself being a fan but more importantly, PART-OWNER of the Warriors knew exactly what he was doing which was so uncalled for,” James said. “He knew the rules more than just the average person sitting watching the game courtside so for that Something needs to be done ASAP!”

James also asked what would’ve happened if Lowry put his hands on Stevens in retaliation.

“You guys would be going CRAZY!! Calling for him to damn near be put in jail let alone being suspended for the rest of the Finals all because he was (protecting) himself,” James said.

James, who had been keeping low this postseason after his streak of playing the last eight NBA Finals snapped this season said he had to speak out.

“After saw what I saw last night, took time to let it manifest into my thinking, I couldn't and wouldn't be quiet on this!, said James adding the hashtag, #ProtectThePlayers#PrivilegeAintWelcomeHere.”

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