Monthly Archives: May 2009

Some truth amid the lies and damned lies

In the midst of all the absolute hooey filed by the NHL in the lawsuit against Jerry Moyes, the sad-sack, money-losing owner of the Phoenix Coyotes, finally came some truth direct from the Moyes bankruptcy filing.

The following is from the Coyotes Chapter 11 petition:

“Fans have not supported the Coyotes in sufficient numbers to make the club financially viable,” the motion reads. “Indeed, the Coyotes’ 12 years in Phoenix demonstrate little potential for the development of the fan base in Phoenix that is necessary to make the club financially viable.” 

The truth might hurt the folks in Phoenix, but it’s still the truth.

Bring the team back to Canada and if NHL commissioner Gary Bettman doesn’t like Hamilton, then send it to Winnipeg. Warts and all.

Why does Gary Bettman love non-traditional hockey markets and crooks and hate Canada, Winnipeg and Jim Balsillie?

ST. PAUL, MINN. – For years, we’ve been suggesting, quite loudly at times, that the National Hockey League’s decision to turn the southern United States into a hockey Mecca has failed miserably.

Sports fans in Tampa, South Florida, Atlanta, Nashville and Phoenix have all but rejected the game. Crowds are small (on most nights the rinks are barely half full), there are few actual local hockey players in the communities and television ratings for the sport are miniscule.

Despite the NHL’s best efforts to force-feed the game to these folks, the people of the south really don’t like it that much. As a result, owners are losing bags full of money while beautiful state-of-the-art buildings sit empty — and very few people care. 

So why wouldn’t a league commissioner facing ownership woes, markets that are lukewarm to the game — at best — and an economy still on the slide, not look to greener pastures for some relief?

I guess, because NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is so full of his own pride that he has no desire to give up on a plan that is now, without fear of argument, a monumental failure.

These past few weeks, we have watched as the NHL started out looking foolish and then got caught in a lie. All because (a) the hockey team in Phoenix, Ariz., is and always has been a disaster and (b) Bettman must make the southern U.S. experiment a success.

In early May, Phoenix Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It was a sad day for the NHL, a league that had argued for years that there were no problems in Phoenix.

However, by our calculations –and with the help of reports from the Arizona Republic — we believe the Coyotes have lost more than $400 million since being yanked out of Winnipeg and shipped to the desert in 1996.

What we expected to happen four or five years ago, ultimately took 13 seasons and three different ownership groups to come to pass. 

Moyes, financially crippled by a slow down in the trucking industry, his core business, filed for bankruptcy protection and then cut a deal with Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie to buy the team for an amount that will be well north of the reported $212.5 million 

Meanwhile, Balsillie has been asked to provide “debtor-in-possession” financing, meaning Balsillie provides the necessary funds to allow the team to keep operating while the bankruptcy process continues. According to our insiders in Phoenix, Balsillie’s offer is for $216.5 million and will pay off all the current creditors.

But there is a catch. If Balsillie’s offer is accepted, he intends to move the team to Southern Ontario and Bettman wants no part of that.

“The current team ownership asked that I table an offer to purchase the Coyotes and significant discussions resulted in an offer that is in the best interests of the franchise, the NHL, and the great hockey fans of Canada and Southern Ontario,” Balsillie said in a written statement.

“I am excited to move closer to bringing an NHL franchise to what I believe is one of the best un-served hockey markets in the world, Southern Ontario. A market with devoted hockey fans, a rich hockey history, a growing and diversified economy and a population of more than 7 million people.”

Not surprisingly, Bettman and his NHL mob have no desire to allow another team in Canada. In fact, after telling the international press for more than six months that the league was NOT operating the Coyotes, Bettman and his No. 2, Bill Daly, showed up in Phoenix with a lawsuit that, in part, read: “The NHL has been operating the Phoenix Coyotes hockey club since November 2008.”

In other words, “We’ve been lying like dogs for six months, but now that we don’t want this dog of a franchise moved out of that hockey hot-bed in the Arizona desert, we’ve decided to tell the truth.” Or something like that.

It has truly been a sad month for the NHL. The league is dying in the southern U.S., and it’s unlikely the Coyotes are the only team suffering financial stress, but when a guy who has lost about $200 million (plus his purchase price) on a franchise that will never, ever be profitable, the only thing the NHL will do, is strip him of his ownership tag and let him wallow in his losses, alone.

Let’s not pull any punches, here, it has become increasingly apparent that the Winnipeg Jets should NEVER have been moved to the Arizona desert in the first place. That’s not to say that, at the time, the Jets shouldn’t have been moved. With no NHL arena and no political will to build one (thanks to Gary Filmon and Susan Thompson), the Jets had to move elsewhere. There was no future in Winnipeg. It’s just that the future was not in Phoenix.

Sadly, Bettman has decided that he and only he will find the next Coyotes owner and that could, be another embarrassment for a league that, off the ice, at least, is an embarrassment almost every day.

Just to illustrate, let’s look at the history of some of Bettman’s most infamous owners.

When he took over as commissioner, one of his closest friends and supporters inside the league was Los Angeles Kings owner Bruce McNall. McNall went to jail for fraud.

After Steven Gluckstern nearly went broke owning the New York Islanders, Bettman brought in Charles Wang and Sanjay Kumar. Kumar is now serving a 12-year sentence for fraud.

Bettman also needed help after Buffalo Sabres owner Seymour Knox died in 1996, so he found cable TV magnate John Rigas. In 2002, while he was the Sabres owner, Rigas was convicted of, you guessed it, fraud. He’s still in prison.

Then there was “Bootsie.” With the Nashville Predators in bankruptcy protection, Bettman refused to sell the team to Balsillie because Balsillie wanted to move it to Canada. So Bettman went out and found a wealthy venture capitalist named William (Bootsie) Del Biaggio III. It seemed like a good idea at the time, I guess, but it wasn’t long before Bootsie was facing fraud charges brought on by everybody from the SEC to Luc Robitaille to Joe Montana. Bootsie hasn’t gone to jail yet, but thyere are a lot of people who would like to see him in the crow bar hotel.

Funny, isn’t it? Gary Bettman does not want Jim Balsillie to own a team, but he’s happy having felons own teams.

After 12 seasons in the desert, the Phoenix Coyotes have now lost more than $350 million and this past week, even Forbes Magazine reiterated that hockey had no future in Arizona. And while it might have no future in Winnipeg, it should be moved to a hockey market.

Look, I’ll admit that all of those people who believe Winnipeg still does not have a suitable NHL arena, does not have enough corporate backing and does not have a large enough fan base are probably right. But I will also say that because the best gate the Coyotes have all year is the exhibition game they play at the MTS Centre in September, it’s probably time the Phoenix Coyotes returned to their roots and became the Winnipeg Jets again.

Unless, of course, Gary Bettman finally comes to his senses and allows Jim Balsillie to buy a team and move it to Ontario. That wouldn’t be a bad thing either.

Selena Roberts joins a growing list of “Let’s Make it All Up,” mainstream media superstars

In this space, we have long railed about the mainstream media mess that was the Duke Lacrosse Case. For those who have forgotten, the Duke Lacrosse Case was a tragic miscarriage of justice fueled and then perpetuated by the mainstream media — particularly the New York Times. In this sad story, an ambitious North Carolina prosecutor named Michael Nifong, railroaded a number of Duke University lacrosse players, by using his pals in the mainstream media to convict the kids long before the charges ever got to trial. He and the media, essentially destroyed their lives.

Of course, the case unravelled, the media looked like a foolish, ignorant mob and Nifong lost his job and his license to practice law.

In the middle of it all was a woman named Selena Roberts who, from her bully pulpit at the New York Times, convicted the young men long before any of the false charges ever reached a court of law. Roberts looked like a hateful, mindless idiot when the smoke cleared, but she never did apologize to the young men, whose lives she personally destroyed, or even to the public, which was duped into believing Nifong was right, the kids were monsters and the hooker at the heart of the phony charges was some saint sent to clean up the mess left by men.

There is a deep, dark, white-hot hole in hell for people like Selena Roberts, but like so many mainstream media monsters before her, she can’t quit spewing the fictional venom. 

Now, she’s decided to destroy the life of baseball player Alex Rodriguez and she’s done a pretty damn good job, too. In a book entitled “A-Rod,” this entitled journalist (how does a hate-filled hack like Roberts get jobs at the New York Times and Sports Illustrated?), Roberts has used more than 115 un-named sources to make Rodriguez look like the worst human being ever to play baseball.

Like her scummy predecessors, Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Wlliams, who wrote the books Game of Shadows using more than 225 un-named sources, in their very successful effort to vilify Barry Bonds, Roberts appears to make it all up.

I don’t see any other way to phrase it. When you use that many un-named sources, the only thing you can call it is fiction. Like Fainaru-Wada and Williams, who created a novel so gripping it forced the United States justice department to make up charges against Bonds — charges that have hung in the air for years and have still not resulted in a trial — you’ve done a remarkable job. It was so good, in fact, that Fainaru-Wada got a high-paying job with ESPN as a reward.

Obviously, there is a real benefit to writing fiction and the passing it off as fact. Selena Roberts is the latest mainstream media darling to go down that road and be rewarded for it. I don’t get it, when I wrote my two books, Home Run: The History of the Winnipeg Goldeyes and Canwest Global Park (2005) and the Canadian bestseller, The Winnipeg Jets: A Celebration of Professional Hockey in Winnipeg (2007), my editor wanted nothing less than every quote to be attributed along with dates, times and places, in order to source them all. I guess, when you’re a mainstream media star you can make up quotes and American editors will just blow them off as “un-named sources.”

Fortunately, the American mainstream media, embarrassed by Roberts’ incredible gall, has answered back:

Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star wrote on May 2:

Not long ago, sports writer Selena Roberts compared the Duke lacrosse players to gang members and career criminals

She claimed that the players’ unwillingness to confess to or snitch about a rape (that did not happen) was the equivalent of drug dealers and gang members promoting antisnitching campaigns.

When since-disgraced district attorney Mike Nifong whipped up a media posse to rain justice on the drunken, male college students, Roberts jumped on the fastest, most influential horse, using her New York Times column to convict the players and the culture of privilege that created them.

Proven inaccurate, Roberts never wrote a retraction for the columns that contributed to the public lynching of Reade Seligmann, Colin Finnerty and David Evans.

Instead, she moved on to Sports Illustrated, a seat on ESPN’s “The Sports Reporters” and a new target, baseball slugger Alex Rodriguez…

Roberts’ book [about A-Rod] is a long-winded blog. Why it’s being treated as an unimpeachable piece of journalism can only be explained by the cushy position she’s been handed by the New York Times, ESPN and Sports Illustrated and the unchallenged institutional bias found within the elite sports media institutions.

Then, a day or two later, Josh Alper wrote on nbcnewyork.com:

Matt Lauer of “Today” didn’t touch on Roberts’ role in that miserable moment in rushing to judgment (on the Duke lacrosse players) on Monday morning, but he did ask her about the use of anonymous sources, especially if any of them might be telling tall tales to fulfill their own motivations of seeing Rodriguez taken down a peg. Roberts’ response is curious, to say the least.

“But I think there’s not so much jealously as disillusionment because he’s so great, he’s such a great player, he didn’t need any of this,” Roberts told Lauer. ”He didn’t need to embellish anything, he’s a great story in and of himself.”

If, as Roberts’ book alleges, Rodriguez was doing steroids in high school, how is it true that he didn’t need any of this? According to Roberts, he wasn’t embellishing anything. Rather, he was maintaining the steroid use that he started well before stepping foot on a big league diamond. Unless his sixth-grade Little League season was so good that he could have been in the majors right then and there, it is Roberts’ contention that he was never a great player because he was always taking steroids.

And a great story? That’s not evident in what’s been leaked from her book. Stories about A-Rod tipping pitches for the opposition or forcing clubhouse attendants to put toothpaste on his toothbrush are meant to make judgments about Rodriguez’s character. Judgments that all flow from the fact that he used steroids, something that Craig Calcaterra, who hit on Roberts’ Duke connections before Whitlock, quite rightly calls bogus

Those stories, all anonymously sourced, are being roundly rejected by A-Rod’s teammates. Those denials are from Doug Mientkiewicz and Michael Young, which we know because they were willing to put their name behind their words.

As Roberts told Lauer, her use of anonymous sources broke the report of A-Rod’s failed drug test. Every word she writes may be true, but it certainly appears that she’s just as interested in using them to judge A-Rod as a person as she is in finding out if he broke any laws or rules of baseball.  

Selena Roberts’ book on Rodriguez, just like the Bonds’ book before that, is sleazy and yellow and all too typical. Sadly — and Jason Whitlock, among others, know it’s sad — the princes and princesses of the mainstream media milk their hateful, sick fiction for all it’s worth.

Coyotes File for Bankruptcy: Hate to Say We Told You So, But….

We’ve been reporting the losses for 13 years. Today, our expectations finally came true. The Phoenix Coyotes have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

By our calculations — with the help of reports by the Arizona Republic — we believe the Coyotes have lost more than $400 million since being yanked out of Winnipeg and shipped to the desert by NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman in 1996.

What we expected to happen four or five years ago, ultimately took 13 seasons and three different ownership groups to come to pass. Because of problems created by his struggling core business, trucking-magnate Jerry Moyes could no longer pick up this franchise’s massive losses. Today, the inevitable became official. The Coyotes are bankrupt.

It’s not the end of the world, of course, The Pittsburgh Penguins have filed for bankruptcy twice. This time, however, moving the franchise might be the only alternative. 

That’s because, almost immediately upon the announcement of the filing, it became apparent that the Coyotes had actually asked RIM CEO and proud Canadian billionaire, Jim Balsillie to make an offer for the team.

Balsillie has been asked to provide “debtor-in-possession” financing. Essentially that means Balsillie provides the necessary funds tp allow the team to keep operating while the bankruptcy process continues. According to our insiders in Phoenix, Balsillie’s offer is for $216.5 million and will pay off all the current creditors. There is $35 million owed to the NHL, about $80 million to SOF Investments LLC and about $97.8 million to a long list of unsecured creditors.

If Balsillie’s offer is accepted, he intends to move the team to Southern Ontario.

“The current team ownership asked that I table an offer to purchase the Coyotes and significant discussions resulted in an offer that is in the best interests of the franchise, the NHL, and the great hockey fans of Canada and Southern Ontario,” Balsillie said in a written statement.

“I am excited to move closer to bringing an NHL franchise to what I believe is one of the best un-served hockey markets in the world, Southern Ontario. A market with devoted hockey fans, a rich hockey history, a growing and diversified economy and a population of more than 7 million people.”

Naturally, the NHL wants no part of that move, but the league might not have any alternative this time. The league is dying in the southern U.S. and it’s unlikely that the Coyotes are the only team suffering financial stress.

Last night, NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly issued the following statement:

“We have just become aware of today’s Bankruptcy Court filing purportedly made on behalf of the Phoenix Coyotes. We are investigating the circumstances surrounding the petition, including the propriety of its filing.  We have removed Jerry Moyes from all positions of authority to act for or on behalf of the Club.  The League will appear and proceed before the Bankruptcy Court in the best interests of all of the Club’s constituencies, including its fans in Arizona and the League’s 29 other Member Clubs.” 

The Jets should NEVER have been moved to the Arizona desert in the first place. The business failure of Gary Bettman’s commissionership is becoming more apparent every day. 

(For more information on the move of the Winnipeg Jets to Phoenix, see my book, Winnipeg Jets: A Celebration of Professional Hockey in Winnipeg, available at chapters.ca or winnipegmen.com)

Things that make you go “Hmmmmm…”

Stuff that’s interesting, crazy, muddled, odd or just downright frightening:

1) Everyone out here in the West is just thrilled that B.C. product Scott Richmond is doing so well with the Toronto Blue Jays this season. It’s a tribute to both Richmond’s determination and the Jays decision to take a big chance on a guy who came out of the independent Northern League.

But while, Richmond has gone 4-0 with a splendid, Cy Young-like 2.67 earned run average and a brilliant 1.22 WHIP,  those who remember Richmond in his final season in the Northern League, are shaking their heads in disbelief most nights.

He went 10-9 that season with the Edmonton Cracker-Cats with a 4.26 ERA. Not bad, not great. But he was pounded by the Winnipeg Goldeyes. In fact he went 1-3 with two no-decisions in six starts against Winnipeg . He gave up seven home runs all season, three to Winnipeg.

Obviously, you can reach the big leagues through the Northern League. However, Scott Richmond makes it appears as if the Northern League is a lot tougher than the bigs.

2) There there is this report, just out in New York City yesterday: New York Islanders owner Charles Wang has lost $283 million in the nine years since he purchased the franchise. 

We could have told him it was a bad investment. So, too, could have the guy from whom he bought the team, re-insurer Steven Gluckstern. Gluckstern was a partner of Dr. Richard Burke. He and Burke bought the Winnipeg Jets from Barry Shenkarow and moved them to Phoenix where they just kept losing more money.

Gluckstern, a very nice man who loved hockey, eventually went off and bought the Islanders. It’s hard to imagine one good businessman could be sucked into owning the teams in Phoenix and Long Island, but re-insurance is a lucrative business. Hockey is not. Some say that between the Coyote sand the Islanders, Gluckstern lost more than half his personal wealth.

So now Charles Wang (Computer Associates) owns the team and while no one will have a tag day for Wang, one has to wonder how stupid these really smart people can be.

The NHL is a lousy investment, so unless you’re just a philanthropist who gets a charge out of making millionaires out of otherwise non-descript Canadian twenty-somethings, buying a National Hockey League franchise in the United States is a pretty stupid way to flush your cash down the toilet.

See Charles Wang. Or Steven Gluckstern. Or Jerry Moyes. Or Dr. Richard Burke. Or Alan Cohen in Miami. Or those poor suckers in Atlanta and Nashville.  

3) At 11:30 p.m. on May 3, 2009, the Winnipeg weather office predicted that on Monday, May 4, we would have gusting winds up to 50-kilometres and rain. 

When I got up this morning, it was perfect. By 6 a.m., the same donkeys who were predicting cold rain were now predicting sun and 20-degree C temperatures.

Of course, at 6 a.m., they didn’t have to do much predicting. All they had to do was walk outside.

We have many problems in this world from an economy that was simply one giant Enron to a mainstream media that preys on fear and ignorance to a national weather office that couldn’t properly predict what’s going to happen to the skies in the next seven minutes let alone the next seven days.

When I was giving ballpark tours at Canwest Park on Saturday, I asked our baseball fans to do me one favour this year: Do not believe a word a TV or radio weather person tells you about the upcoming weather. Not one word. The weather office is as useless as teets on a bull and the more it predicts, the dumber it gets. For a baseball team like the Winnipeg Goldeyes, these wild, stupid predictions of constant bad weather that turn out to be dead wrong do so much harm, it can’t be quantified.

Environment Canada hurts Canadian business. These morons tell people the weather is going to be lousy when it’s not going to be lousy and they seem to do it for laughs. They are bad for the economy and bad for anyone who does business outdoors in Canada.

Along with greedy Harvard MBA grads, we’d all be better off without them.

What the NHL Should Do and Why It Doesn’t

With a truly outstanding Stanley Cup playoff spring in full bloom, we enter May with another mind-numbing discussion of the Phoenix Coyotes financial woes and whether or not the Coyotes might one day return to Winnipeg.

It’s mind-numbing because it’s moot. It’s mind-numbing because far too many commentators are just catching up with old news (read this headline today: Suddenly, players’ union singing Canada’s praises. Wow, “suddenly?” NHLPA executive director Paul Kelly has been singing Canada’s praises for more than a year). And it’s mind-numbing because commissioner Gary Bettman is still more concerned about doing right by himself and a handful of owners, than doing right by the game.

We got word this week that the league had bailed out the financially  moribund Coyotes once again and that it was the NHL, not Doug Moss, Wayne Gretzky et al., who were running the team. That turned out to be patently false, as far too many of these newspaper-reported items have turned out to be, and while the NHL did, in fact, send the Coyotes a pile of dough, the league did not take over the team.

Not like that would matter. As long as Bettman is commissioner he will insure that there will be a franchise in Phoenix. After all, he’s the guy who put that team in the desert and he will fight to the death (of the league?) to keep it there.

After all, despite what a lot of hockey fans really want to believe, Bettman isn’t stupid. He knows his reputation relies on his decision, made early in his career, to place teams in the American south. He believed in the “footprint,” and despite all the signs to the contrary — and everything that isn’t outright delusional in this world — the footprint has, to this date, failed to provide the revenue or the fan base that Bettman was so sure the NHL would receive.

Tampa, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Atlanta and Phoenix are great places to live (I’d move to anyone of them tomorrow), it’s too bad the folks who live there aren’t hockey fans. 

A simple combination of history and mathematics would suggest that by moving teams from the U.S. South and Southwest to Ontario, Quebec, and the Canadian West, it might not guarantee absolute financial success, but it will guarantee a fan base and therefore a legitimate chance at financial success.

Certainly, in Winnipeg, an NHL franchise would lose money, but not the $40 million that Phoenix lost on operations in 2008-09.

However, once again, that’s moot, at least until there is a new commissioner.