Tag Archives: dr. richard burke

Bettman Working On His Revisionist View of Hockey History As Canada Becomes His Final Frontier.

TAMPA — This week, Gary Bettman started his “Dick Cheney Tour.” It’s a simple format. You find people in the media who won’t challenge your assertions and then you go out and change history.

This past week, Bettman sat down with Toronto-based Sun Media and got all warm and fuzzy about his relationship with Canadian hockey markets. In a piece entitled: Bettman Asks Canada to Be Patient, the commissioner of the National Hockey League suggested he had a great track record “in respect to the Canadian franchises.”

“For anyone that knows my record in respect to the Canadian franchises, that’s simply not true (that he tried to keep Jim Balsillie out of Hamilton simply because he disliked teams in Canada),” Bettman told the Sun. “I can’t satisfy those who believe our intentions were other than straightforward of ensuring NHL rules and procedure. That’s what this was about.”

Really? What rules? And at what cost?

When Bettman forced the Jets out of Winnipeg in 1996, he convinced the two hockey-ignorant rich guys who bought the franchise that if they couldn’t cut a deal with the Target Center in Minneapolis, they should take the team to a basketball gym in downtown Phoenix, Ariz.

Dr. Richard Burke and his partner Steven Gluckstern lost a fortune on the Coyotes (mostly because of the restricted view arena they were forced to play in) and soon sold the team to Steve Ellman and Jerry Moyes who lost millions more. Since 2004, the Coyotes have lost $389 million and that doesn’t count this year. Currently, the Coyotes are on pace to lose approximately $140 million on operations. Especially after virtually giving away tickets to the season home opener, then drawing announced crowds of 6,899 and 9,162 to their next two games.

So in order to “uphold the rules” of the NHL, Bettman is going to ask the other 29 franchises to find another $140 million (at least) to cover the losses of a team owned by the league (as long as Judge Redfield T. Baum allows the NHL to ultimately purchase the Coyotes for about $140 million out of bankruptcy). Nice rules.

Trouble is, Bettman has always found ways to bend his own rules. For those who remember the loss of the Jets, owner Barry Shenkarow proposed a “group ownership” position, in which a number of Winnipeg business people would own an equal share of the team. Bettman said, “No,” that the NHL’s governors wanted to deal with only one prominent person in each market, a person who could make financial decisions at the drop of a hat.

Bettman put a halt to the group ownership plan in Winnipeg, adding more fuel to the team’s demise, but a few years later he went ahead and allowed it in Edmonton, since it was the only way to save the Oilers. In essence Bettman made up the rules as he went along: First, to take a team out of Winnipeg and put it in Phoenix and then, to save a team in Edmonton. Some Canadian markets he likes, others he doesn’t. Rules be damned.

So if Gary Bettman simply asks Canada to be patient, I wouldn’t believe him. However, if he told the truth (remember, this is the guy who said the league was NOT funding the Coyotes last year and then, in court, was forced to tell the truth) and admitted that he had to come back to Canada because he had no other alternative in the recession-crippled United States, I’d probably listen to that.

Remember, the six Canadian franchises make up 33 per cent of the league’s revenues. Despite what Bettman says or thinks, he’s going to have to come back to Canada eventually.

Why Won’t Bettman Just Face the Facts in Phoenix?

Not long ago, we asked if NHL commissioner Gary Bettman was delusional.

In fact, at the time, Bettman told Fox Sports Arizona that the Phoenix Coyotes financial problems will be resolved and — get this — new investors will be coming on board.

 

It was exactly the same line he had handed to a group of Canadian business leaders earlier that week. of course, as we found out this week, Bettman’s position on the Coyotes borders on the insane.

 

Maybe, he just has to keep trying to tell everyone that all is well in Phoenix because he was the guy who convinced businessmen Dr. Richard Burke and Steven Gluckstern to buy the Winnipeg Jets and move them to Phoenix back in 1995 (Burke and Gluckstern sold the team years ago after Gluckstern lost almost half his personal wealth on that dog). Maybe Bettman just has to continue trying to fool folks who know better.

 

This week, the Arizona Republic reported something I’ve been reporting for years. Since 2001, the Coyotes have lost $200 million. Since the Coyotes moved to the desert, the franchise has lost more than $300 million. The current owner, Jerry Moyes, is in huge trouble. His old partner, Steve Ellman, is now almost irrelevant. 

 

Moyes is losing his shirt. Maybe $40 million this year. Still, Bettman is telling anyone who will listen that all will be well and the Coyotes aren’t going anywhere.

 

That’s crazy. Since last year, Moyes has been trying to find a partner or new ownership altogether and while Bettman claims an investor is out there, one finds that really, really, really hard to believe.

 

My friends, Sam Katz, Bryon Hamilton and Jason McCrae-King were just at a game in Phoenix is which, maybe, 8,000 people attended. I’ll ask this question again: How are the Coyotes EVER going to be successful?

 

Gary Bettman must live in some weird alternative universe where everyone is rich and there is no recession. He does not inhabit the same time-space continuum as the rest of us.

 

Bring the Coyotes back to Winnipeg. Now. They might still lose money, but at least someone will care.