Actually, Nelson, talking smack to you about the Clippers sale would be like talking smack to a toddler that you just beat in basketball. Anyone who was paying attention, including many people on the Boneyard, knew the team would fetch upwards of $1.5B as a floor.
Your position was that the team could get around $550M today but would definitely not be sold until after Sterling died at which point the purchase price - by some logic that only you understand - would be down to about $400M. Your theory of "lost revenue streams" or some such garbage.
When it was pointed out to you that it's actually a seller's market, that there's a long list of potential buyers desperate to get in on the lucrative tv and media rights deals around the corner, and that the value of even moribund franchises are skyrocketing, you said that that was "nonsense."
It's not even that you were wrong - everyone gets things wrong - it was the stridency with which you asserted that you were right and everyone else is wrong that is so funny.