i may be missing the points above, but it seems to me that the arguments now are not that sterling through the courts can overturn silver's arbitration ruling, which banned him, fined, etc.
i believe the questions now focus upon whether the NBA by trying to force a sale of the clippers by sterling is going to get what the NBA wants. that is far less clear since right now the only hammer the NBA has is to dissolve the clippers as a franchise through a 3/4 vote of the remaining owners. the NBA cannot take the clippers away and sell them on their own, or they would have done so by now.
as was pointed out by many, sterling is litigious, infamously so. next, as was also pointed out he will not hesitate to make the best of the situation by telling other owners that unless he receives an above market settlement price, he goes to court. and on this he may have a point that might win.
banning sterling is within the NBA rules. but him being forced to sell at a loss is much murkier ground since the NBA constitution does not expressly allow that. and let's face it, by threatening to dissolve the clipper team if sterling does not sell, that is exactly what the NBA and silver are trying to do here - compelling sterling to sell at what could very well be a loss in terms of its market value.
this does not appear to be as clear cut on this front as it does on the banning/fine front. my expectations are that sterling will fight the forced sale until he gets a king's/bigot's ransom for the clippers.
finally, it might strike the other owners that it is better to settle with sterling at high selling price rather than risk a court battle.
in any case, this may very well drag out for quite a while. should be fun drama for the summertime.
