Monthly Archives: April 2009

No Booze at Bomber Game in Toronto This Summer.

Hey Bomber fans, we know how much you love the Appleton’s Rum Shack at Canada Inns Stadium. We know how much the East Side revels in its ability to drink more and cheer louder than any other gathering of fans in the CFL.

 

Well, if you’re among “The Proud, The Many, The Drunks,” at Bomber games, you’ll probably want to avoid the airplane to Toronto on Aug. 1. 

 

Winnipeg fans love to head to T.O. every summer to watch the Bombers face their arch-rivals, the Toronto Argos. It’s a nice weekend and it’s always loads of fun. This year, however, there will be no beer at the ball yard.  

 

In a statement issued on Friday night, Rogers Centre officials admitted that provincial liquor licensing inspectors, citing “drinking infractions at several unnamed past events,” will close down liquor sales at three sporting events this year.

The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario advised the Rogers Centre’s Food and Beverage Dept., last week that it would suspend liquor licences for the April 7th game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Detroit Tigers, the Jays’ April 21st game with the Texas Rangers and the Argo-Bomber game on Aug. 1.

So, Bomber fans, ahh, wear a big coat and BYOB?

New Football Stadium in Winnipeg a Good Deal All Around

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers will get a new owner in 2010 and a new stadium in 2011.

It’s probably the two best things that could happen to the franchise.

 

The Bombers are a proud franchise that continues to lose money and continues to lose football games. Although the team went to the Grey Cup in 1992, 1993, 2001 and 2007, the Bombers have not won a Grey Cup championship since 1990. Frankly, in an eight-team league, every team should win at least one championship in 18 years just by dumb luck.

 

There is no dumb luck in Winnipeg. Just when it looks like this team has the horses and is red-hot at the right something like, oh, a starting quarterback’s broken arm douses the flame.

 

In the meantime, the 55-year-old stadium, located in the centre of a commercial district in the west end of town, has become more of an eyesore than a destination. The most popular aspect of Canada Inns Stadium is the Appleton’s Rum Shack. In fact, it’s often more popular than the team. 

 

So when media baron and property developer David Asper came forward 14 months ago with an idea to build a new stadium and take over ownership — and fiscal responsibility — from the community board that has run the team for almost 80 years, it seemed like the right thing to do.

 

Still, Asper has spent the last 14 months doing everything possible to sell his idea to the community. He’s run an interactive web site, www.blueandgold.ca; he’s held open forums, both public and with special interest groups; and he’s acquiesced to the demands of federal, provincial and civic politicians. 

 

He has done everything in good faith.

 

But at the news conference on Wednesday to announce the deal, the new members of the old media (we’re not talking about the veteran reporters such as the Free Press’ s Randy Turner and Ed Tait, the Sun’s Kirk Penton, Global’s Joe Pascucci or CJOB’s Bob Irving, but this group of children who don’t Google and don’t read the printed material that’s handed out) gave a virtuoso performance of ignorance and attempts at, well, hubris.

 

It started when a young child from CBC television opened with a question impugning Asper about his business acumen. She suggested that because the family business, Canwest Communications was struggling, Asper himself was somehow going to go broke and default on his responsibilities.

 

Now I would not have thought anything of that question coming from, say CJOB, a Corus radio station that is and always has done quite well financially, but for CBC to send out its child reporter to suggest that Asper, who is using his own money (not Canwest’s money) to build the stadium, would soon go broke and we’d have a helluva mess is patently outrageous.

 

This, from a taxpayer-funded operation that has outlived its usefulness and contributed mightily to the recent problems faced by the Asper family and by the country’s other major television network, CTV. The CBC receives $1 billion a year from the federal government — one freakin’ BILLION, not million, BILLION — and can sell TV advertising on top of that and yet it still can’t balance its books. Instead, after losing $171 million in 2008, it went back to the feds asking for something called a “bridge loan.” Bridge to what? The CBC was never going to actually pay back the $171 million. They were looking for another handout.  

 

This time the feds said, “Not a chance, you boobs,” and so last week, the public broadcaster announced 800 layoffs. 

 

Still, despite all of its own incompetence, some CBC news producer sent out a little girl with an attitude to suggest Asper was somehow going to fail miserably. Had she only bothered to use Google, she might have learned that Creswin Properties and Canwest Communications are two different companies run by two different people. Leonard Asper is not involved in this deal.

 

Stunning.

 

From that point on, the news conference was loaded with questions that were already answered on the printed handout that was given to every media member when he or she entered the room. 

 

Sad, but true. And the mainstream media is wondering why its days are numbered.

 

Here are the facts. The deal is tremendous. Asper pays $100 million out of his own pocket to build the stadium and take over the team. No other person on the planet — no one, nobody, period — would step up and do the same for a community or its CFL team. And besides, the new owner not only bleeds Bomber blue, but Bison brown and so the university will get a marvelous facility as well. (For those folks who live near the university, they will notice that the traffic will be a little busier 10 or 11 times per year.)

 

The new stadium will be fine — although after watching the Dallas Cowboys spend a billion dollars (there’s that B-word again) on their new building I sometimes wonder what we’ll really get for $140 million. Still, the old stadium is done. Let’s hope that by 2011 when the new building is finished, the upper decks in the old one haven’t fallen down on someone. 

 

The days of public bailouts, which include right now to a certain extent, should be over. This is a good deal for everyone involved, especially the folks who buy tickets to Bomber games. Just go to www.blueandgold.ca for all the details.

 

It’s just too bad that so many people in the media don’t get it. Because they don’t get it and can’t explain it, far too many members of the public — who didn’t bother to show up at Asper’s public forums — don’t really get it, either.

 

 

Would You Fire Wayne Gretzky?

Here are the numbers: The Phoenix Coyotes are 32-37-7 this season and have missed the playoffs for the fourth straight year.

 

The team is 139-159-24 (.469) since the current coach took over four seasons ago. The Desert Dogs have never made the playoffs under this coach and their best finish was fourth in the Division, 38-37-7 in 2007-08.

 

Under normal circumstances this guy would be done.

 

But in Phoenix (or Glendale, Ariz., for the sake of accuracy), the coaching situation is a little more complicated.

 

After all, Coyotes co-owner Wayne Gretzky, the Great One, “the best of all time,” is the head coach.

 

“I wouldn’t fire him. Would you fire him?’ said one NHL executive we asked last night, a guy who screamed for anonymity.

 

“How would you like to be (Coyotes president) Doug Moss, walking into the Great One’s office to tell him to clean out his desk? How long do you think Moss would last?”

 

Not long. Gretzky was the guy who fired the TV announcer, Curt Keilback, and the PR guy, Rich Nairn, after the tem had a bad year in 2006-07 as if it was their fault. That’s been Gretzky’s history as a coach. Blame somebody else.

 

Sadly, it doesn’t work that way when you wield so much power. Gretzky is the team’s managing partner, alternate governor and head coach. He has complete control over all personnel. This disaster of a franchise has his stamp on it.

 

How owner Jerry Moyes can look into the empty stands and then watch that horrible team on the ice every night make ones wonder how he sleeps. The Coyotes are a dog in every sense and the guy in control has been Wayne Gretzky.

 

Scotty Bowman, a legend who was fired in St. Louis after taking the Blues to two Stanley Cup finals and was then fired in Buffalo with a record of 210-134-60, has to wonder what it takes anymore.

 

This league has been full of good coaches who were fired.

 

Meanwhile, Wayne Gretzky, who has always been a rare commodity, is now the rarest of them all — a weak player personnel guy and bad coach who keeps his job.

 

By the way, I probably wouldn’t try to fire him, either. 

 

* * *

 

Our Congratulations

 

Congratulations to Manitoba Junior Hockey League alumni Ian Lowe and Ryan Adams of Bemidji State University. 

 

On Sunday, Bemidji State beat Cornell 4-1 to reach NCAA hockey’s Frozen Four for the first time in the school’s history.. 

 

Lowe is a former member of the Swan Valley Stampeders while Adams is former OCN Blizzard forward. 

 

On April 9, Bemidji will face the Miami of Ohio Redhawks in the national semifinal. The only other Manitoban in the Frozen Four is Winnipeg-born Colin Wilson of heavily-favoured Boston University.