Hampreacher
New member
If the problem is that ten teams loing money some big time. Move them or fold them. O r at least some. Seattle, Portland. Moncton, Quebec City and Hamilton are possibilties.
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Nik? said:Chev-boyar-sky said:The Current had a decent panel of people discussing the lockout this morning. Bettman was somewhat raked across the coals for continuing to try and make the "Southern Strategy" a success. If anybody wants to listen:
http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/episode/2012/10/01/nhl-lockout-sparks-call-for-more-canadian-teams/
I'm at the point where I really hope the owners get taught a lesson over this. Forget an equitable split. If they continue to be unreasonable, I hope this costs the league (well I guess that would mean the players as well) a bunch of money on Phoenix, Columbus and others. Grrrrrrr...
I took a listen and I'm not entirely sure it's fair to say Bettman got raked over the coals. I think that some pretty fair points were made that a lot of people forget about how the push to move teams south in the 90's existed pre-Bettman(the teams added under Bettman have been Columbus, Atlanta, Nashville and Minnesota) and I think Zimbalist, who was most critical of the strategy to expand throughout the US, did make a pretty embarrassing omission by not mentioning that the League now has a 2 billion dollar US tv deal.
That said, I do think they made some interesting points regarding where the league might grow in the future. I think it's important to point out that the general consensus seemed to be that putting teams in Canada wasn't a good move for long-term growth and that Europe is a far more lucrative option.
I think that's kind of important going forward for people to keep in mind. For all the talk about how the NHL would be so better off in Canada as opposed to the US, Forbes' numbers have the Jets as losing money last year and the Flames/Senators as being only barely profitable. The idea that some people put forth during the whole Balsillie mess that moving a team to Canada would be a terrific boon for both the league and that owner just doesn't seem to be true. Canada may very well be tapped out as a market.
Hampreacher said:If the problem is that ten teams loing money some big time. Move them or fold them. O r at least some. Seattle, Portland. Moncton, Quebec City and Hamilton are possibilties.
Potvin29 said:From Adrian Dater, writes for the Denver Post:
adater @adater
I was talking to a highly placed hockey source tonight who said...
Owners aren't budging off their HRR revenue take desires and neither are players. But only on the first year. After that, the revenue takes start to get closer to even. So essentially this whole NHL lockout is coming down to that first year of the revenue split. Would they really lose a whole year over a 3-4 point difference?
Hampreacher said:If the problem is that ten teams loing money some big time. Move them or fold them. O r at least some. Seattle, Portland. Moncton, Quebec City and Hamilton are possibilties.
Chev-boyar-sky said:Well I guess I could have said he didn't get a lot of love to be more accurate. Zimbalist basically said he's been a failure so I took a bit of liberty from there.
Chev-boyar-sky said:I also found the Europe comment interesting, though I'm not sure how that would work logistically. I could see some kind of World Hockey League, where there's basically two league's (North America, Europe) that play within their geographical area until there's only 1 team left, which results in a 7 game series split between the two continents. I don't see the NHL simply adding 2-5 European expansion teams ,however.
Nik? said:Hampreacher said:If the problem is that ten teams loing money some big time. Move them or fold them. O r at least some. Seattle, Portland. Moncton, Quebec City and Hamilton are possibilties.
I'm sorry but Moncton, New Brunswick? A city that's about 1/7th the size of Winnipeg, the league's smallest market? A city that's a third of the size of Windsor or London? They're a possibility for what, exactly?
Britishbulldog said:An NHL franchise might be a bit too much for us to bite off here in Moncton. We have been recognized as being a municipality to "punch out of our weight class" but this would sink us.
The issue is we host 1 - 4 day events that can draw on over 1,000,000 people from a 3 hour radius because of our location. I think having people commit to that driving distance for 42 games in our winter climate would be tough. Like Winnipeg, Moncton might be able to sell 19,000 season tickets but we still have another hurdle.
We don't have the large corporations to help sell boxes.
Yeah, scratch us off the list because you would need to many variables line up perfectly for Moncton to do it.
Nik? said:Britishbulldog said:An NHL franchise might be a bit too much for us to bite off here in Moncton. We have been recognized as being a municipality to "punch out of our weight class" but this would sink us.
The issue is we host 1 - 4 day events that can draw on over 1,000,000 people from a 3 hour radius because of our location. I think having people commit to that driving distance for 42 games in our winter climate would be tough. Like Winnipeg, Moncton might be able to sell 19,000 season tickets but we still have another hurdle.
We don't have the large corporations to help sell boxes.
Yeah, scratch us off the list because you would need to many variables line up perfectly for Moncton to do it.
That certainly wasn't intended as a shot at the fine people of Moncton, just a recognition that there's not that many of them. Even if you were going to make the argument that there could be a team in the Maritimes, and let's be real that's a tough sell regardless, I think you'd have to go with Halifax.
I mean in addition to everything BBD says above the real obstacle for any municipality these days in terms of hosting a NHL team is having the arena. As the good people of Edmonton are finding out, owners typically want the city to pay for a big chunk of it and for a population of 160,000 or so to kick in 200+ million dollars to build that kind of rink? That would be just the worst kind of craziness.
WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:I'd love it if a lot of these players that have gone to Europe to play didn't come back.
Have that owners.
WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:"Let me buy my Capitals season tickets, oh what's that? No Oveckin or Backstrom? In fact I'll pass" - Every Capitals fan.
Now will that kind of thing happen? Probably not, but if a few franchise guys get well paid over there, they might be bitter about coming back to the hand that is biting them.
A lot of these European leagues are paying tax free amounts that are equal to or more than the NHL contracts after tax, Europe did not have the financial clout during the last lockout that it has now.
It could make it somewhat interesting, especially considering the comments guys like Ovechkin have make already.
Corn Flake said:I can't be the only one feeling this way.