American business executive (born 1956)
Joe Lacob
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c9/Joe_Lacob_White_House_2023.jpg) Lacob in 2023
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Position
| Majority Owner, Co-Executive Chairman, and CEO
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League
| NBA
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Born
| (
1956-01-10
)
January 10, 1956
(age 68)
New Bedford, Massachusetts
, U.S.
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Joseph Steven Lacob
[1]
(born January 10, 1956) is an American business executive who was a partner at
Kleiner Perkins
[2]
and is the majority owner of the
Golden State Warriors
of the
National Basketball Association
(NBA).
[3]
Early life and education
[
edit
]
Lacob grew up in a
Jewish
family
[4]
in
New Bedford, Massachusetts
. The Lacob family relocated to
Anaheim, California
and Joe switched his allegiance to the
Los Angeles Lakers
and the
Los Angeles Angels
.
[5]
[6]
Lacob earned a bachelor's degree in biological sciences from
University of California, Irvine
in 1978, master's degree in public health (epidemiology) from
University of California, Los Angeles
(UCLA) and an MBA from the
Stanford Graduate School of Business
.
[7]
Professional career
[
edit
]
Lacob has been a partner at
Kleiner Perkins
, a
venture capital investing firm
, since 1987.
[5]
His investments have centered around firms involved in life sciences, medical technology, Internet and energy, and such enterprises as
AutoTrader.com
,
Align Technology
and NuVasive.
[5]
Before he joined Kleiner Perkins, Lacob held executive positions with
Cetus Corporation
(now Chiron), FHP International (a health maintenance organization) and the management-consulting firm of
Booz, Allen & Hamilton
.
[8]
In interviews, he has credited his epidemiology degree for giving him a background in statistics that has fed the statistical side of his longstanding sports interest.
[9]
He was a primary investor in the
American Basketball League
, a professional women's basketball league that eventually folded from failure to compete successfully with its rival, the
Women's National Basketball Association
(WNBA).
[5]
In January 2006 he became part-owner of the Celtics, where he became a co-investor with
H. Irving Grousbeck
, an entrepreneur and a professor at the
Stanford Graduate School of Business
.
[10]
On July 15, 2010, Lacob and the group of investors he headed agreed to buy the
Golden State Warriors
of the NBA from
Chris Cohan
for $450 million, requiring him to sell his minority interest in the Celtics.
[11]
The Lacob -
Peter Guber
group won out over a dozen other bidders for the Warriors, including
Oracle
chief executive officer
Larry Ellison
,
24-Hour Fitness
founder
Mark Mastrov
and Texas billionaire financier
David Bonderman
.
[12]
He had been a Warriors' season-ticket-holder for about a decade.
[5]
He already had extensive experience operating an NBA team as part-owner of the Boston Celtics, and also points to his friendships with two major league baseball team general managers,
Billy Beane
of the
Oakland Athletics
and
Jeff Moorad
of the
San Diego Padres
, who have both proven that winning records are not solely related to the size of the team payroll.
[13]
Lacob approved the acquisitions of
David Lee
and undrafted rookie guard
Jeremy Lin
, a hometown favorite. He also fired coach
Don Nelson
and replaced him with assistant coach
Keith Smart
. The sale was unanimously approved by the NBA league's board of governors on November 12, 2010. Lacob and
Peter Guber
are the chief owners, but Lacob is in charge of day-to-day operations.
[12]
[14]
Before the 2014-15 NBA season, Lacob fired coach
Mark Jackson
who had just led the Warriors to the playoffs in consecutive seasons. Lacob explained the decision at a conference of fellow venture capitalists: "Part of it was, he couldn't get along with anybody else in the organization. And, look, he did a great job -- and I'll always compliment him in many respects -- but you can't have 200 other people in the organization not like you."
[15]
Lacob generated some controversy by calling his team "light years" ahead of everybody else in the NBA during the
2015-16 NBA season
.
[16]
The Warriors won championships in the
2014-15 NBA season
,
2016-17 NBA season
,
2017-18 NBA season
, and the
2021-22 NBA season
. During his tenure with the Warriors, the team has attained the NBA records for the best regular season with 73?9 and most wins in a season (regular season and postseason combined) with 88 in 2015?16, as well as best postseason with 16?1 (.941 winning percentage) in 2016?17.
As of 2022, Joe Lacob's net worth is $1.5 billion, according to
Forbes
.
[17]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Lacob is divorced
[18]
from his first wife, Laurie (nee Kraus), with whom he has four children, Kirk, Kelly, Kent, and Kayci.
[19]
[20]
He is currently married to Nicole Curran.
[21]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"FEC Disclosure Report Search Results"
.
- ^
Ross, Andrew (July 16, 2010).
"New owner Lacob is passionate about Warriors and making sure Lebron doesn't win anything"
.
San Francisco Chronicle
.
- ^
Howard-Cooper, Scott (October 19, 2010).
"Warriors hope Lee, new philosophy mean return to playoffs"
.
NBA.com
.
- ^
ESPN Grantland: "The Winter of Jerry West - Catching up with The Logo at his home in West Virginia" By Jonathan Abrams
October 5, 2011
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
Thompson II, Marcus (March 11, 2011).
"Lacob's dream comes true -- partially"
.
San Jose Mercury News
. Archived from
the original
on January 14, 2012.
- ^
Smith, Marcia C. (June 12, 2008).
"Orange County boy returns to area as part owner of Celtics"
. Retrieved
March 11,
2008
.
- ^
"Kleiner Perkins website"
. Archived from
the original
on 2012-11-19
. Retrieved
2015-06-19
.
- ^
Proxy statement for Align Technology, as quoted at Forbes.com
- ^
see Kawakami interview, part 3
- ^
Boston Celtics press release
January 18, 2006
- ^
NBA press release
July 15, 2010, "Report: Warriors sold for record $450 million"
- ^
a
b
Thompson II, Marcus (2010-11-13).
"Group headed by Joseph Lacob, Peter Guber finally gets NBA approval to take over Golden State Warriors"
.
The San Jose Mercury
. Archived from
the original
on 2024-05-25
. Retrieved
2010-11-14
.
Even before the NBA approved the sale, Lacob had a hand in personnel decisions with Cohan's blessing.
- ^
see Kawakami interview, part 2
- ^
Simmons, Rusty (February 4, 2011).
"Nelson cites Warriors' effort, calls roster flawed"
.
San Francisco Chronicle
. Archived from
the original
on February 7, 2011.
It was done really professionally," Nelson said. "I talked to [Lacob] on the phone before I got fired, and I was really impressed. I was a little surprised about the way things happened, but I think it is for the best for everybody.
- ^
"Warriors owner: Kerr an upgrade over Jackson"
. 6 December 2014.
- ^
"Report: Lacob's 'light years ahead' quote has become a joke around NBA circles"
. September 2016.
- ^
"Joe Lacob"
.
Forbes
. Retrieved
April 25,
2021
.
- ^
Haute Living: "Joe Lacob: The Charitable Champion" by Kelley E. Carter
November 3, 2015
- ^
https://medicalgiving.stanford.edu/why-giving-matters/timeless-values-selfless-examples.html
- ^
https://obituaries.almanacnews.com/obituaries/memorials/laurie-lacob?o=7907
- ^
The Mercury News: "Who’s that woman sitting next to Warriors owner Joe Lacob? Nicole Curran has been there the whole time and holds an important role in the franchise" By Marcus Thompson II
February 22, 2017