Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver is currently in hot water after being accused of racism and misogyny by numerous individuals within the organization. While the investigation is ongoing, Sarver is now facing more problems.

In October of 2020, part Suns and Mercury owner Dick Heckmann died at 76-years-old. Six months later, his widow held a posthumous “roast” in memory of her late husband. The audio from the memorial was sent to numerous people within the Suns ownership group, but it wasn't made public until Tuesday, by Sports Illustrated. Warning: It's pretty savage:

In it, Sarver opens by referencing an ongoing Suns’ home game, in which the team is down heavily to the Spurs in the third quarter, and how Heckmann likely would be displeased with the score. “He’s up there somewhere with his orange hat, watching the games and probably motherfucking with Kobe Bryant somewhere up there,” Sarver says. He then moves on to a series of sexually explicit jokes and anecdotes. Those included:

References to Heckmann’s sons’ sexual exploits: “We just bought the team in June of 2004. My biggest concerns were ticket sales, sponsorship revenue, trying to sign some players, getting a winning record—what I really know is my biggest concern was the Heckmann boys were fucking their way through the cheerleading team.”

Sarver even went dove into how Heckmann always bragged about having sex all the time and made a rather weird joke about former Suns star Steve Nash:

“Dick was chasing everything that moved in Scottsdale. And speaking of—someone said he left his DNA. He did leave his DNA in Steve Nash's socks somewhere in the locker room.”

Sarver said Heckmann liked to boast about how frequently he had sex: “Dick would say he had sex 10 times in a day. Unmedicated. … And I finally figured out, it was Dick’s sex math. So when he said ‘10 times,’ [Sarver thrusts] what he meant is like in and out five times; that was 10 times for Dick.”

Yikes. I mean, guys talk like this with their friends sometimes. But at a memorial roast? It seems like a little bit much. This isn't likely to get the Sarver in more trouble in regards to the current investigation, but it's definitely not a good look. It would take a lot for the NBA to remove him as the Suns owner, but anything is possible if there is enough concrete evidence of his actions.