Tag Archives: Winnipeg Goldeyes

Is It Just a Couple of Guys or are Hockey Players Really Stupid?

Dustin Glant is a 29-year-old pitcher from Indiana who now makes his home deep down in the Florida Keys at Marathon, Fla. He lives so far away from Winnipeg that he’s actually closer to Cuba than Miami.

Glant is in such a hurry to get to Winnipeg to pitch for the Goldeyes this season, he’s already driving north. One of the best pitchers in the now-defunct Northern League last season, Glant won 25 per cent of the games played by the Schaumburg Flyers. He was in-demand this off-season and said he only wanted to sign with one of three teams — Gary, Fargo or Winnipeg.

“Winnipeg was always at the top of my list and fortunately Rick (manager Forney) had a veteran’s spot open,” Glant said. “I’m 29 and my days of being signed by a team in organized baseball are probably behind me. So I want to win. I haven’t even been to the playoffs since 2004 so I was looking to play for a winner. I know that Gary, Fargo and Winnpeg all have great teams and I would have a chance to win on any one of those teams, but Winnipeg was my first choice because Winnipeg is such a great place to play.

“I’m good friends with Wes Long and he just raves about it. He says it’s great to be able to play in a place where you’re treated like a big leaguer. And it’s such a great city. There is so much to do.

“I know, when we played there with Schaumburg I always wanted to have the Friday night start so I could enjoy my weekend. Nobody wanted that Sunday afternoon start because you had to watch yourself. If I started on Friday night, I had the chance to start my weekend early and enjoy everything Winnipeg had to offer — the prettiest girls anywhere in the world, great night life and Kokanee Beer. That’s why I’m driving to Winnipeg. I want to have my car when I’m up there so I can enjoy Winnipeg on a day-off. I get the best of both worlds, a chance to play for a winner and a great place to play.”

This might be an unfair comparison because Dustin Glant is a professional athlete who has actually been to Winnipeg. He’s a smart guy who speaks well and actually knows what he’s talking about.

Then we get hockey players. First it was Eric Belanger and this week it was Ilya Bryzgalov.

According to Sun Media on Thursday, if it turns out that the Phoenix Coyotes do move north to Winnipeg, free-agent Bryzgalov says he won’t go.

“You don’t want to go to Winnipeg, right?” Bryzgalov told Sun Media on Wednesday. “Not many people live there, not many Russian people there (more than in Phoenix, Ilya). Plus it’s cold. There’s no excitement except the hockey. No park, no entertaining for the families, for the kids. It’s going to be tough life for your family.”

Bryzgalov is a free-agent so he has the right to play anywhere he wants. And frankly, I’d prefer to spend my winters in Orlando or Tampa. But to ‘diss a community when you’re absolutely ignorant about it — Winnipeg has always been known as “a great place to raise kids” — and you’re not the only one, is frightening. I really didn’t think hockey players were that stupid. I was wrong.

Can’t wait for Dustin Glant to arrive here in the ‘Peg. Ilya Bryzgalov? The last thing our community needs is another really ignorant rich guy.

 

Bombers Lose Again. Not From Lack of Effort.

On the same day, the Winnipeg Goldeyes ended a disappointing season with a win, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers did their best impersonation of the Cleveland Browns.

Juan Diaz hit his team leading 24th home run of the year and drove in his team-leading 75th run of the year as the Goldeyes beat Schaumburg 4-3 in the final game of the 2010 campaign. Kevin West drove in his 70th run of the year and won the “Hit the Cover off the Ball” Trophy as the team’s leading hitter by finishing the season with a .337 average, just barely ahead of Diaz’s .335. The Goldeyes finished 46-53 and there will be plenty of soul-searching in the off-season.

But enough of the good news. In Regina yesterday, the Bombers were beaten 27-23 by the heavily-favored Saskatchewan Roughriders in the annual Labor Day Classic. The Bombers covered the 10 1/2 points, but they also fell to 2-7 on the season, and also fell further into last place in the CFL East. With the loss, the Bombers also fell out of the lead in the crossover playoff  with the two dogs in the West.

It was a game the Bombers should have won. Easily. But because they play like the Browns, every time it looked as if they just might steal a win, they turned the ball over or dropped a pass or got sacked. It also appears as if they’ve lost No. 1 quarterback Buck Pierce for an extended period of time after he injured his arm late in the fourth quarter on a play that might have been called roughing the quarterback in a different game with a different group of officials.

On Sunday, the Bombers had 391 yards of total offence to 359 for Saskatchewan (without losses), but they never held the lead. The Riders jumped out to a 1-0 lead, a 4-0 lead, a 4-3 lead, an 11-3 lead, and 11-6 lead and an 11-9 lead at the half. Then they held an 11-10 lead, an 18-10 lead, an 18-17 lead, a 25-17 lead, a 26-17 lead, a 27-17 lead and a 27-23 lead. They won 27-23, because the Bombers holder, Mike Renaud, mishandled the snap on the convert attempt with 10 seconds remaining. It was Browns-like.

All in all, it was an ugly day for Winnipeg. If they weren’t turning it over, they were taking a bad penalty. Every time it appeared they were going to take over the game, they screwed up. It was not a lack of effort. It was a lack of concentration against a team that, on this Sunday afternoon, was just that much better.

The Bombers are the best 2-7 team in CFL history, but they’re still 2-7. That means they are still a lousy football team.

And yet, I’ll wager two Sport Select tickets that they win the Banjo Bowl.

A Week in the Trenches.

The past week sure was fun.

1) LeBron James announced he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers and was going to play with Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade in Miami. Interesting choice. Wade and james play exactly the same game and Bosh did nothing in Toronto unless he had the ball. The Heat have no Rajon Rondo and no Pau Gasol. It will be fun to watch which one of these guys breaks down first.

If James really wanted to win, he’d have signed in Chicago. Gibson, Rose, Noah and Boozer with LeBron? That’s a winning combination.

In the meantime, his news conference was uncomfortable and embarrassing and it might just have been a little too foreboding for his own good.

2) Watched all or pieces of about 25 Major League Baseball games on MLB TV this week. Saw about 30 bad calls and four ejections. Why baseball is against replay is a question that just can’t be answered.

However, it feels good to be involved in the Northern League. The next time anyone says that umpiring in the NL is lousy, I can just point out how truly dreadful the umpiring is in the majors. Not one of those guys could call their dogs.

3) Had a chance to talk to author Jerrad Peters, the man who wrote, “We Call it Soccer,” about his impression of this year’s World Cup. A gigantic soccer maven, Peters had this to say about the final between the Netherlands and Spain coming up in about four hours:

“Hmmm… Am I happy with World Cup. Good question. I’m not sure whether this is a legendary World Cup, or an extremely sub-par one. I do know this—I am not at all excited for the final. It will be 0-0 after extra time and Spain will win on penalties. I will be shocked if it is an exciting game.”

Thanks, Jerrad. If you’re looking for excitement, the Goldeyes face Joliet at 1:30 p.m. CDT. If you can’t get to Canwest Park, the game will be live, with me and Kenny Wiebe, on Shaw TV Channel 9.

Another Week Amid the Strange and Misguided…

The 2010 Winnipeg Goldeyes training camp has started, the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs are well on the way, the NBA has moved into the second round and the Major League Baseball season is one month into it.

It’s been an odd couple of weeks, but there is one thing we can always count on: Somebody will jerk over somebody else even if it’s just for a laugh.

Let’s ponder the strange and misguided…

1) The voice of my youth passed away on Tuesday night. Ernie Harwell, one of the nicest men I ever met, died of cancer at age 92. The voice of the Detroit Tigers from 1960-2002, Harwell was the quiet, pastoral sound in my head for almost every summer of my life.

I had a long interview with Harwell on the field at Joker Marchant Stadium in Lakeland, Fla., in 2002. He was kind and funny and he could tell one heck of a story. He got his first play-by-play job with the minor league Atlanta Crackers in 1934 at the age of 16 and went on to become, among other things, the only broadcaster ever traded for a player.

In 1948, the Crackers let Harwell out of his contract in order to join the Brooklyn Dodgers as a fill-in for another legend, Red Barber, in exchange for Minor League catcher Cliff Dapper.

When Bo Schembechler took over the Tigers as president in 1992, one of Schembechler’s first decisions was to fire Ernie Harwell. Schembechler, an ex-football coach who proved he couldn’t run a one-car funeral, was eventually dumped and Harwell was re-hired.

Ernie Harwell wasn’t Vin Scully or Jon Miller or Jack Buck or John Gordon or Charley Steiner or Tom Hamilton, great announcers all. Ernie Harwell had a sweet southern accent and a homey approach to the game, and he was the best I ever heard.

2) There is talk in Toronto about changing the nickname of the city’s NBA team from the Raptors to the Huskies.

Only in Toronto would that discussion start. And it starts because the Leafs aren’t in the playoffs, nobody cares about the Argos and nobody knows anything about baseball.

3) I loved how the American media handled Brett Favre’s injured ankle this past week.

When it became apparent that Favre might need minor surgery to relieve pain in the ankle – an ankle he injured long before the Vikings lost the NFC final to New Orleans – it was written this way: “Brett Favre will not be able to return this season without ankle surgery.”

After Favre said he’d contacted noted orthopaedic surgeon James Andrews about the ankle, he posted the following on his website:

I want to add to the information provided in the article that was published this morning on ESPN’s website. Given the reaction to the article, and the typical conclusion jumping, I thought I’d clarify a few things.

While my ankle has been bothering me, the injury is not debilitating. For example, I’m able to work around my property without any problems. Sure – certain exercises cause some ankle pain, but it’s nothing that I haven’t experienced (or played with) before. In fact, many people don’t realize that I injured my ankle before the NFC Championship game. I’ve had surgery on this ankle twice before, and I’ve played with the pain before. The hits I took throughout the 2009 season, including the Saints game, just added to the ankle pain and likely caused some bone spurs.

I don’t believe major surgery on the ankle would be required for me to return in 2010. I’ve consulted with Dr. Andrews on the phone, and a relatively minor procedure could be done to improve the dexterity of the ankle, and to relieve the pain. I’ve put up with pain worse than this in my career, and I didn’t want anyone to assume that the possibility of surgery was the sole factor that would determine whether I return or not. Some people reacting to the ESPN story have made this assumption. I don’t blame them for doing so, given that the term “surgery” often covers a variety of procedures, some more complex than others.

The ankle pain is a factor, but one of many factors that I’ll need to consider in making my decision. Other factors include the input of my family, and the wonderful experience that I had last year with the Vikings.

– Brett Favre

Sounds like Brett Favre will return to the Vikings this season. Surgery or no surgery.

Goldeyes TV Schedule Released

I’ve had a number of telephone calls from Goldeyes fans and just ordinary baseball fans who have wondered why there hadn’t been a Safeway Goldeyes Baseball on Shaw TV schedule announced.

Well, it’s a long story. And I mean l-o-o-n-g. When new contracts are negotiated things get caught up in legalese and while Shaw and the Goldeyes have had a great negotiation period, things took a little longer than both sides expected.

However, both sides got it right, it’s a three-year deal, everyone is happy, it was a win-win situation and the schedule has now been released:

2010 SAFEWAY GOLDEYES BASEBALL ON SHAW

Thursday, May 20 vs. Lake County, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, May 26 vs. Lake County, 7 p.m.

Thursday, May 27 vs. Joliet, 11 a.m.

Saturday, June 5 vs. Schaumburg, 6 p.m.

Tuesday, June 8 vs. Kansas City, 7 p.m.

Thursday, June 10 vs. Kansas City, 11 a.m.

Tuesday, June 22 vs. Gary, 7 p.m.

Thursday, June 24 vs. Rockford, 7 p.m.

Sunday, June 27 vs. Rockford, 7 p.m.

Friday, July 9 vs. Joliet, 7 p.m.

Sunday, July 11 vs. Joliet, 1:30 p.m.

Tuesday, July 20 vs. Lake County, 7 p.m.

Thursday, July 22 vs. Lake County, 6 p.m.

Saturday, July 24 vs. Schaumburg, 6 p.m.

Monday, August 9 vs. Gary, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, August 11 vs. Gary, 7 p.m.

Thursday, August 12 vs. Gary, 12 Noon

Saturday, August 14 vs. Fargo, 6 p.m.

Monday, August 23 vs. Rockford, 7 p.m.

Tuesday, August 24 vs. Rockford, 7 p.m.

Friday, August 27 vs. Fargo, 7 p.m.

Saturday, August 28 vs. Fargo, 6 p.m.

Sunday, August 29 vs. Fargo, 1:30 p.m.

Ken Wiebe, Jamie Bettens, Jim Toth and I will be back this summer and the Goldeyes will have one of their finest teams ever. All games are on Shaw Channel 9 and it’s going to be a very exciting season.

(More information on Safeway Goldeyes Baseball on Shaw can be found at www.goldeyes.com)

Bauer Resigns, Kelly Fired. David Asper Can’t Arrive Soon Enough.

Full disclosure: Former Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach Mike Kelly is my friend. He’s been my friend for 20 years. He will still be my friend.

With that said, Kelly’s unceremonious departure from the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Thursday was not surprising. After a difficult season in which he was forced to rebuild a football team that had been crumbling from within under Doug Berry, and then had to fight a vindictive media that was out to destroy him, Kelly was attacked in his own home by an ex-girlfriend and, as a result, was arrested and charged with assault under Pennsylvania’s strict zero tolerance law.

A man can’t get into a physical altercation with a woman — anyplace, anytime — and regardless of the details, the man will always lose in the court of public opinion. After the arrest, it was only a matter of hours before the Blue Bombers Board of Directors fired Kelly. They really had no other choice.

I spoke to Mike on Friday and, not surprisingly, he wasn’t talking. When legal is involved, there isn’t much one can say.

Still, the events of Thursday were quite interesting. In case you’ve forgotten, CEO Lyle Bauer resigned and head coach Kelly was fired. The circus of news conferences, complete with festering piles of bullshit you could actually measure with a thermometer, brought two things into focus:

(1) If you are the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, you don’t ever argue — even discuss — the delivery of your message with the mainstream media. In Winnipeg, the media will control the Bombers’ message, not the Bombers.

(2) Despite the existence of the Bombers board and despite Lyle Bauer’s presence as CEO for the past decade, the Bombers are run by the local mainstream media. If the mainstream Winnipeg media wants something, the Bombers will roll over and give it to them. That might account for the fact the team hasn’t won a championship in 19 years.

When you turn the operation of a sports franchise over to people who have never worked a day in the front office of a sports franchise, you’ll have problems. When you turn a football franchise over to people who have never played a game of touch, let alone tackle football, you will be a disaster.

In Winnipeg, the Bombers fear of the media has proved to be their undoing. This year, that was made quite clear.

When Kelly suggested that it was time to become professional with the dissemination of information, he was actually reprimanded by his boss.

Kelly’s plan was to handle the media the way the National Football League handles the media. Say the team plays on a Friday night. Kelly would speak to the media on Thursday and Friday morning, then after the game on Friday and then again on Saturday. On Sunday, the offensive co-ordinator (or the No. 1 offensive coach) would speak to the media and then, on Monday, it would be the defensive co-ordinator. On Tuesday and Wednesday, assistant coaches would get the floor and then it would come around to Kelly again.

When certain members of the local media got wind of that, they were all over Bauer. It was Kelly every day or nothing. Bauer, of course, relented, and Kelly was thrust into that tiny, smelly stairwell outside the media bunker every day. For the Bombers, it was another dumb decision in a season of dumb decisions.

So when people wonder, “Why didn’t Kelly just shut up?” the answer was, he tried but he wasn’t permitted.

Kelly also wanted to move the daily news conference out of that claustrophobic stairwell and into the Sun Centre (frankly, all Bomber media information should be disseminated in the Sun Centre), but he wasn’t permitted to do that either. Seems the Bombers couldn’t afford to keep the Sun Centre clean.

Unlike an NFL franchise which has a vice-president of communications who not only has equal authority with the head coach, but is regarded so highly by his employers that he/she is at an equal pay grade with the head coach, the Bombers’ communications people have always been little more than back-room peons who make small paycheques and send out press releases. Kelly received no direction, got no help and had no filter because there was no one in the organization with the responsiblity or the authority to make sure the message was not only controlled, but delivered in such a manner that the local mainstream media felt sufficiently appeased.

Meanwhile, Kelly wanted to control television’s access to his practice time. He decided early on to give the TV stations specific times to record. It’s been done in the NFL for two decades and Kelly just wanted to feel more comfortable about TV’s ability to record what he was doing at practice (Not that a TV anchor would have any what’s on tape, but what an opposing football coach might do if he saw something odd. Kelly had no fear of the media. He knew they had no clue). Simple request.

Trouble was, the team’s communications peon didn’t bother to send out the schedule until, oh, AFTER, the first practice of training camp. Global’s Joe Pascucci went nuts when he was told he couldn’t record most of the first practice and Kelly was left to accept responsibility for a communications department that either didn’t do its job or was told, at a higher level, not to do it.

There were dozens of other incidents. Kelly was not going to be allowed to control his own message and not only was the local mainstream media not going to allow him to do it, but apparently neither were certain members of the Bombers front office.

2009 was a Gong Show in Bomberland. In the end, the Bombers board got a rebuilt team (yes, yes, the Bombers still need a quarterback) without a leader off the field, without a leader on the field and without a decent place to play.

However, that’s no problem for this Bomber board and their pals in the mainstream media, the folks who have created this little problem. After all, we’ve already been handed a list of acceptable CEO and coaching candidates by the local press and one of the names of the coaching list is Paul LaPolice. Yep, that’s the same Paul LaPolice that the local media called “incompetent” when he ran the Bombers offence in 2002 and 2003 (even though he put up huge passing numbers in 2002). That’s the same guy they ran out of town on a rail.

In Winnipeg, there are two professional sports franchises that are privately owned. The baseball Goldeyes, 2009 Organization of the Year in the Northern League and the hockey Moose, 2009 American Hockey League President’s Trophy winners. Both franchises are beautifully operated and both play in gorgeous venues. It became painfully obvious this week that private ownership is the only way for the Bombers to go.

In fact, what happened on Thursday — as a result of what happened throughout in 2009 — was proof that David Asper’s arrival as a private, accountable franchise owner can’t occur soon enough. Fear has reigned on Maroons Road for far too long. It’s time to bring the Bombers into the 21st Century.

In Two Appearances, Former Goldeyes Reliever Sherrill Almost Perfect With the Dodgers

It didn’t take long for former Winnipeg Goldeyes reliever George Sherrill to make his mark in Los Angeles.

Last Thursday, Sherrill, who played for the Goldeyes in 2002 and 2003, was traded to the Dodgers by the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for two outstanding prospects: 22-year-old switch-hitting slugger Josh Bell and 21-year-old righthanded pitcher Steve Johnson.

According to the Los Angeles Times, the Dodgers planned to use Sherrill as “an eighth and ninth inning guy,” the set-up man for closer Jonathan Broxton. However, with Broxton injured, Sherrill made his first appearance last Friday night in Atlanta as the set-up man for James McDonald.

With two runners on and nobody out in the seventh inning, Sherrill came in and struck out Nate McLouth and Kelly Johnson, walked Chipper Jones to load the bases and then struck out all-star catcher Brian McCann to end the inning. He got the hold as the Dodgers beat the Braves 5-0.

Then, on national television on Sunday night, Sherrill came in to face one batter in the eighth — Atlanta slugger Chipper Jones — and got Jones to fly to centre with two runners on and two out. The Dodgers went on to win 9-1.

“I just don’t understand why the Orioles would even think about trading George,” said Goldeyes manager Rick Forney on Friday night. “George can do so many things and at $2.75 million a year, he’s not that big a hit to your payroll. That move just won’t make any sense to me at all. Ever.”

No kidding, as we reported earlier, in Baltimore this season, Sherrill had a 2.40 earned run average with 20 saves in 42 appearances.

The Orioles have made a lot of dumb moves in recent years. Trading away a lefthanded closer who could also be a great set-up man or situational lefty, and who “only” makes $2.75 million a year is one of the dumbest.

Favre Says No Thanks. Will the Vikes Actually Start the Season with Jackson or Rosenfels?

Brett Favre has told the Minnesota Vikings that he won’t return to the National Football League this year or any other year in the future. He’s retired, period.

Wonder what Reebok and the NFL are going to do with all those FAVRE No. 4 Vikings jerseys that are already being sold in places like Shanghai and Hong Kong?

Oh well, that means Sage Rosenfels or Tarvaris Jackson or maybe even John David Booty will start at quarterback this year for the Vikings. While I, frankly, believe that Jackson was capable of being a winner two years ago, Vikings fans think otherwise so we’ll see what happens. But somehow, I don’t see the Vikes starting the season with any one of those three guys at the helm.

Call me crazy, but if Jackson was good enough last year, there would have no pursuit of Favre in the first place. Or even Rosenfels.

Meanwhile, Rosenfels has shown a great deal of maturity and class. In an interview with the St. Paul Pioneer Press, he said: “I don’t think it’s necessary to give me an explanation because I understand the situation. I’ve been around the league long enough. … I feel no animosity toward players or coaches.”

That’s a solid response to an otherwise difficult scenario. It’s hard not to root for the guy. But somehow, he just doesn’t appear to me to be the starter on a team that has Super Bowl aspirations. Call me crazy. Trent Dilfer of all people, won a Super Bowl in Baltimore, but I’m sure this Vikings team and its three-headed monster of Rosenfels/Jackson/Booty doesn’t strike fear into the hearts of the Bears or Packers.

And that’s why I still believe the Vikings are going to make some news before Sunday, Sept. 13. Whether that news is spelled F-A-V-R-E or V-I-C-K or something else altogether, I just can’t for the life of me see Sage Rosenfels or T-Jack under centre on Opening Sunday in Cleveland.

How about Favre coming in about Week 3 of training camp?

* * *

THE OTHER MICHAEL

No not Michael Vick, Michael Bishop.

On Monday, the replacement for Lefty Lefors went to his first Winnipeg Blue Bombers practice and took nearly every snap. Still, head coach Mike Kelly hinted that (and I’m paraphrasing), “Oh, perhaps Michael won’t be ready to start on Saturday in Toronto and maybe, just maybe, we’ll go with Lefty again this week.”

Kelly is not insane. He was just playing the local rubes. ‘Cause if Bishop doesn’t start on Saturday at Rogers Centre, the Bombers will be down 5-0 before they can blink — and 5-0 oughtta do it with Lefors at QB.

If Michael Bishop isn’t the answer for the Bombers, Lefors still won’t be. If Bishop fails, Casey Printers will be on the next plane. As much as Mike Kelly likes and even admires Lefors, he’s not going to allow the guy to cost him his job.

And if the Lefors experiement isn’t over, it will. Cost Kelly his job, that is.

CFL NOTEBOOK: The Bombers released both DT Tyrone Wlliams and QB Richie Williams yesterday. A lot of Winnipeg newspaper space was wasted on those two clunkers… The Argos dealt Arland Bruce III to Hamilton for the rights to Corey Mace and some draft picks. That Argo outfit still has no offence. Trouble is, with Lefors at QB, six points was enough last week…

* * *

FROM THE READERS:

Got the following note from Jason, a regular reader and listener, on Wednesday:

Mr. Taylor:

With the Goldeyes in first place heading into the final month of regular season Northern League baseball and playing some very exciting baseball these days, it bothers me that they get lost in the mix because of the Blue Bombers.

The Blue Bombers. One of sorriest excuses for a sports franchise, well, ever. Playing out of a building that’s falling apart and should’ve been torn down 10 years ago. A team that hasn’t won a Grey Cup in 19 years (in an 8-team league!). And this season will be no different, as the team stumbles their way through each game. (kind of makes me wonder why every football fan in this city isn’t desperate to see a new owner take over… what’s so great about community ownership again?)

Yet, it’s all the Winnipeg media talks about. The Winnipeg Goldeyes have a real good shot at bringing this city its first championship since 1994. It’s a team with a beautiful venue, rock-solid ownership, and greater value and entertainment for your dollar than a Blue Bombers game. Yet, this city seems to rarely give them the respect they deserve.

Does it frustrate you too?

- Jason

Jason,

The Goldeyes get tremendous support at Shaw TV, 1290 CFRW, Grassroots News, 92-CITI-FM and www.goldeyes.com.

Just make sure you read, watch and listen to what matters and don’t get caught up in the slow, agonizing death of old media.

Thanks for your note, Jason.

More Stuff: Ricciardi Treats Halladay like Meat. Why Does the Local Media Perpetuate the Myth that Canwest Park Was Built for the 1999 Pan Am Games?

The things that are banging around in my head today…

1) Roy Halladay is a professional athlete and as a professional athlete he makes a very large amount of money. He certainly makes enough money to put up with all the crap that is flung in his direction and as a result, no one should feel sorry for him.

However, far too often we look at the professional athlete as the bad guy in those potential blockbuster deals that may or may not benefit our favourite teams. We often ask questions like: Did the jerk stand in the way of the deal? Why did he have a no-trade clause? Why did they give him a no-trade clause?

And on and on it goes.

In Halladay’s case, we might be witnessing one of the rare times when the athlete is the good guy and the people running the baseball franchise are little more than loud-mouthed buffoons.

According to ESPN, the Blue Jays turned own another offer for Halladay yesterday. the best pitcher on Toronto’s staff did not ask for a trade, but two weeks ago Ricciardi made it clear that he was going to shop around his ace and see what he might get in return.

Then, a week later, Ricciardi said the team might not get a deal for Halladay and he could stay with the club although Ricciardi also made it clear he wants to deal Halladay because the pitcher will “probably” test the free-agent market after his contract expires.

What a jerk. For one thing, Halladay has never even hinted he won’t re-sign in Toronto.You an go ahead an assume it might happen but don’t go public a year in advance and suggest that he’ll probably leave the team. That Ricciardi remark was made for Ricciardi’s benefit. It was made to make Halladay look like the bad guy and it’s wrong.

It was a stupid statement by a guy who has failed to make the Jays anything better than a fourth-place team in the AL East.

The fact is this: Ricciardi went public with his desire to trade Halladay. Ricciardi tried to make Halladay look like the villain. Ricciardi is the bad guy, not Halladay.

All Halladay has done is say nothing and pitch two gems since he was put on the trade block.

Halladay is the good guy.

2) Originally, Junior Moar’s plan was to fight a non-title “keep-busy” bout in September and then defend his Canadian Boxing Federation light-heavyweight crown in December.

But in boxing, like no other sport, things can change dramatically in a very short time.

Last week, during an exclusive interview with Grassroots News, Moar revealed that he will now defend his belt against Regina brawler Michael (Flash) Walchuk on Sept. 17, at the Red Robinson Theatre in Port Coquitlam, B.C. He signed the contract for the fight this past Friday night.

Check out the latest issue of Grassroots News (available Tuesday) for Junior Moar’s story. It’s one of the greatest stories in all of sports today.

3) I hate reading a newspaper and seeing something passed off as fact that is, at worst, a lie and, at best, a myth.

But that’s what happened on Sunday when the Winnipeg Free Press claimed — once again — that Winnipeg’s Canwest Park was built for the 1999 Pan Am Games.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

The baseball park was built for the Winnipeg Goldeyes of the Northern Baseball League by the team’s owner Sam Katz. The city of Winnipeg wanted nothing to do with the construction of the ballpark and that is reflected in the fact that the city’s commitment to the building was less than $1 million.

The Goldeyes had been playing at Canwest Global Park (now Canwest Park) for more than two months when the Pan Am Games arrived. The Pan Am Games organization paid rent to use the building while the Goldeyes played an extended road trip.

The Mayor at the time, Susan Thompson, did everything humanly possible to stop construction of the stadium. She even publicly backed away from a pledge to make the ball park happen by telling the Pan Am Games organizers to play in Stonewall. If the Pan Am Games baseball tournament had been played in Stonewall, Winnipeg would have been the laughing stock of the baseball world. At the time, there were considerably  better facilities in Grand Forks, N.D., than in Stonewall, Man.

As it was, the Pan Am Games executives rented Katz’s ballpark and the tournament was sensational. But the ballpark was NOT built for the Pan Am Games.The Pan Am Games had absolutely nothing to do withe building’s construction. Nothing. Those who contend it did — like the folks in Winnipeg’s mainstream media — are nothing more than revisionist historians.

(NOTE: Want the truth? Just go to www.winnipegmen.com and buy a copy of my book Home Run: A History of the Winnipeg Goldeyes and Canwest Global Park. The true story — much of it from the pages of the Winnipeg Free Press in 1999 — is much more fun than the one the paper likes to sell to its readers today)

Could We Be Going From the Death of Eaton’s to the Rebirth of the Winnipeg Jets?

On a recent Winnipeg Goldeyes telecast on Shaw TV, Winnipeg mayor Sam Katz hinted that a deal to bring the Jets (or a reasonable facsimile) back to Winnipeg could be secured if a number “of very complicated things fell into place.”

“It’s certainly not impossible,” Katz said. “It’s not something that would happen overnight. I would say in the next two-to-five years, perhaps. It would involve the MTS Centre and certainly the Chipmans (Winnipeg’s wealthy Chipman family) would have to be involved, although I don’t think they would necessarily be the major shareholders in the club.

“It would be a very complicated deal. First of all, an NHL team would have to be made available and I think that’s coming. If that happens, there is a chance something could be arranged to bring an NHL team to Winnipeg. I really believe that.”

For months (maybe years) there has been a belief among certain Winnipeg business people that the money is already in place to bring an NHL team back to the ‘Peg. That’s not crazy talk from semi-delusional 35-year-old unemployed males who live in their mothers’ basements. There has also been a more recent belief that if someone, anyone (even Jim Balsillie) can break down the NHL’s cartel, there is a good chance half-a-dozen teams in failing markets could become available.

This week, if Balsillie gets a favourable ruling from Phoenix Judge Redfield T. Baum, there is a very good chance he’ll be able to purchase the Phoenix Coyotes and move the team to Hamilton, Ont. If that happens, other teams will soon become available to the highest bidders. You can almost see the Islanders moving to Kansas City as we speak.

The Chipmans, as wealthy as they are, have made it clear they won’t be bringing a team to Winnipeg all by themselves. Just too much coin. But with some help, they have the building (a building that’s way too small, just ask the Columbus Blue Jackets, but that’s for another day), that could play host to an NHL team. The team would lose money, but it certainly would have considerable fan support.

In order to get the help they need, the Chipmans have already reached beyond the Perimeter Highway. One of the current investors in True North Sports and Entertainment, the parent company of the MTS Centre and the Manitoba Moose, is the Toronto/Stamford, Conn.-based Thomson family.

The Thomsons, owners of Thomson Reuters, Thomson Financial, Thomson Legal, Thomson Scientific, et. al, have a stake in True North today. The family owned the old Eaton’s site in Winnipeg where the MTS Centre now stands and have been investors in the company since the early days.

The key person in this alleged NHL ownership group is David Thomson, who runs the multi-billion dollar Thomson business conglomerate from the head office in Stamford, Conn.

Lately, there has been talk that the Thomsons will soon take over the major shareholder position in True North from the Chipmans.

If that’s true, and there is still some question that it is, the NHL will be in Winnipeg in two-to-five years, just as Mayor Katz suggested on our Shaw telecast last week.