Around June 1, 2009

2009 White Party — Sterling parades rookie Blake Griffin

Shortly after the 2009 NBA Draft, Donald Sterling introduced rookie Blake Griffin at a private 'White Party' in a manner Griffin later described as staged and uncomfortable; Griffin cites the episode as foundational to his early view of Sterling [15][16].

Quick Facts

Approximate date
Spring 2009 (shortly after the 2009 draft) [15][16]
Primary source
Blake Griffin Players' Tribune essay and later interviews [15][16]
Significance
Formative personal impression of Sterling's treatment of players [15]

What Happened

Blake Griffin recounts attending Donald Sterling's annual 'White Party' in Malibu shortly after the 2009 draft, where Sterling repeatedly walked Griffin through groups of guests, introduced him with a scripted line and positioned hired models next to Griffin for photographs and attention [15][16]. Griffin describes feeling objectified and awkward during the episode and says the behavior underscored a power imbalance between owner and player that he and others later referenced when evaluating Sterling's conduct. Contemporary reporting and later interviews with Griffin and profiles corroborate the event as a formative, first-hand anecdote that Griffin publicly related in his Players' Tribune essay and other interviews [15][16][18].

What They Said

"The guy was off his rocker."

Blake Griffin, Griffin's Players' Tribune essay recalling Sterling's public behaviors and demeanor [15]

"Everyone, have you met our newest star? This is Blake! ..."

Descriptive paraphrase of Griffin's account, Griffin's recollection of Sterling's scripted introductions at the White Party [15][16]

Why It Matters

The White Party episode is important because it predates and personalizes the broader Sterling controversy: rather than an abstract complaint about ownership decisions, Griffin's account documents a specific interaction that shaped a player's perception of the owner. That personal recollection helps explain why Griffin's later public reactions to the April 2014 tapes were shaped by long-standing discomfort, and why his Players' Tribune essay resonated—it moved discussion from franchise policy to personal treatment of players [15][16][18].

What Happened Next

Griffin kept the anecdote private for years but later published it in a first-person essay after Sterling's 2014 recorded remarks became public, using the episode to illustrate a pattern of behavior that made players uneasy [15][10]. The 2014 tapes and subsequent league action ended Sterling's ownership role, making the White Party anecdote a prelude rather than an ongoing source of public conflict between Griffin and Sterling once the team changed hands [3][9][15].