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NHL review says league in 'catastrophic' condition
The Globe And Mail ^ | February 13, 2004 | PAUL WALDIE

Posted on 02/13/2004 5:30:57 PM PST by SamAdams76

The National Hockey League's finances are in 'catastrophic' condition and 19 clubs, including two in Canada, lost more than $340-million (U.S.) last season, a league-commissioned study has concluded.

The year-long review, which cost $1.5-million, was done by Arthur Levitt, a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and a senior adviser to the Carlyle Group, a $15-billion investment fund.

Levitt painted a bleak picture of NHL finances saying the league is facing obscurity and cannot survive without dramatic change.

"I wouldn't invest in [the NHL]. I wouldn't bank it, I would say 'stay as far away from it as you possibly can. It's a lousy business'," Levitt said in an interview. "There is no rational business reason to own a National Hockey League franchise."

According to his report the NHL lost $273-million on operations in the 2002-03 season and had about $2-billion in revenue. The loss would have been $100-million higher if other costs, such as interest expenses, were included, he said.

Of the league's 30 clubs, only 11 made money, posting a total profit of about $69-million. The others lost a combined $342-million including one club that lost $41-million.

Levitt said five clubs are facing insolvency and two of those are in such poor shape they did not have their financial statements audited because the audit would have raised problems with lenders.

The six clubs based in Canada are in comparatively good shape, Levitt found. Three made money, two lost money and one broke even. The report did not identify the winners or losers. Because the study reviewed the 2002-03 season, it did not take into account the 20-per-cent rise in the Canadian dollar, which benefits Canadian clubs because players are paid in U.S. dollars.

The report comes as the NHL is trying to negotiate a new labour contract with its players. The league argues drastic changes are needed because players' salaries eat up 75 cents of every dollar in revenue, which is far higher than other professional sports.

The players have rejected a cap on salaries arguing owners should pay what the market will bear. Yesterday, the National Hockey League Players' Association dismissed the report saying it was biased and based on flawed assumptions.

"It is clear the Levitt report is simply another league public-relations initiative," said Bob Goodenow, the NHLPA's executive director. "To suggest the report is in any way independent is misleading."

The union pointed out that Levitt was paid $250,000 by the NHL to do the study. Levitt also hired a team of accountants to work on the report, including Lynn Turner, a former SEC chief accountant, who received $50,000.Goodenow said the Levitt study is flawed because it used the National Basketball Association and National Football League, which both have salary caps, as a basis to define hockey revenue. He said the union is convinced clubs still under-report revenue.

"We continue to believe that a market system, not a team of hired-gun accountants, provides the best measure of the value of the hockey business," he said.

Vancouver Canucks player Trevor Linden, who is president of the NHLPA, said both sides have to compromise. "We've put our best foot forward and tried to make a difference. There's a point in time where you have to be met part of the way," he said.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman called the study "very sobering" but said it backs up what the league has been saying for months.

"Now is really the time to get this behind us and to reason together in an attempt to take this game forward, to make it healthy for everyone associated with it," Bettman said.

"We on all sides of hockey are accountable for where we are and the issue is going to be, do we fix it. If we don't fix this I want you to hold me accountable."

He rejected the union's position that salaries should be determined by the free market. "There is no such thing as a free market. Every market is determined by labour, management, economy, geography and a hundred other factors. This marketplace isn't working."

Bettman said the NHL has to be below the other major sports in terms of how much revenue is devoted to salaries.

Levitt, who said he is a boxing and football fan, said his review captured all sources of revenue for NHL clubs including money generated from concessions, other arena events and broadcasting rights. He also said he had complete independence from the league to conduct the review.

The report "is close to being unchallengeable as anything I've ever been associated with," he said.

Edmonton Oilers' president and chief executive officer Pat LaForge said the Levitt report was further proof of how skewered the NHL has become as a business.

"To me, it's confirmation of a need for a new economic system, the kind the Oilers have supported for a long time."

David Cobb, chief operating officer of the Vancouver Canucks, said it is important not to lose perspective in the debate.

"We're in a period of time with our franchise where we have an excellent team, we have excellent support from our fans, we have the top retail sales in the league, we have the busiest website in the league," Cobb said. "Everything's going well for us."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: hockey; nhl
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To: SamAdams76
Actually, these are probably the only professional athletes that deserve the money. Consider a baseball player leaving a game for a blister. I've seen hockey players get hit in the face with the puck or a stick, receive a few stitches and return to the game on their very next shift.

I, too, am a Bruin fan, #24 who showed everyone what determination and hard work can do. Taz gave 110% every night, bled bruin black and gold and never asked for anything. He was an inspiration.

21 posted on 02/13/2004 7:00:18 PM PST by dirtydanusa (100% American, no Jap cars, no Chinese shoes.)
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To: Blue Jays
Yeah, it was a Freudian slip on my part. Even as I was posting about the NHL, I still had the NFL on my brain! Ironically, football was my least favorite pro sport growing up. Now it is the only sport the matters, as far as I am concerned. Even baseball has fallen far from favor.



22 posted on 02/13/2004 7:09:27 PM PST by SamAdams76 (I got my 401(k) statement - Up 28.02% in 2003 - Thanks to tax cuts and the Bush recovery)
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To: SamAdams76
Scotty Bowman was being intervied by a Detroit radio station today. He was suggesting a rule change to eliminate the trap, or at least make it riskier to use, and to cut down the number of whistles.
23 posted on 02/13/2004 7:11:22 PM PST by CharacterCounts
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To: SamAdams76
Does the NHL have more than 6 teams?
24 posted on 02/13/2004 7:13:20 PM PST by Paladin2 (Unix runs slower than DOS)
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To: SamAdams76
Where's Derek Sanderson when you need him?
25 posted on 02/13/2004 7:18:16 PM PST by Paladin2 (Unix runs slower than DOS)
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To: SamAdams76
the game I used to love

Dittos to that sentiment.

I used to go to 30-35 Ranger games a year and I didn't live within a hundred miles of the Garden. But there came a point where I realized that I was paying to watch other people work, and that I cared more about the outcome than they did. Brad Park was getting about 35c of every ticket ($8.50 top) that was sold and he kept tripping over the red line. Now I wouldn't walk across the street to see a game for free.

The only point I would disagree with you on is scoring. High scoring is not good for hockey, anymore than it is for soccer. There's never a dull moment in a 1-0 game (where the players care more about the score than who won some fight). There can be lots of dull moments in a 5-3 game.

ML/NJ

26 posted on 02/13/2004 7:20:07 PM PST by ml/nj
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To: SamAdams76
I've seen Slapshot - what this league needs is more fighting! (kidding)
27 posted on 02/13/2004 7:23:02 PM PST by Zack Nguyen
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To: SamAdams76
The 3 guys who can save the NHL:


28 posted on 02/13/2004 7:23:24 PM PST by Pokey78 (Steyn: Leftists demonize Wolfowitz because his name begins with a big scary animal and ends Jewishly)
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To: SamAdams76
I think the NHL's problem is the anonymity of the players. I went to every Detroit Red Wings home game in the '64-'65 season, and I knew every player in the league by sight.

Of course, there were only six teams, and the players wore no helmets or faceguards. Today there are, what, 30 teams? I've been unable to sustain my interest since Gretzky retired.

Maybe it's time to rescind some of the rules changes that Gretzky forced. In the old days, when there were two simultaneous minor penalties, each team played one man short. Gretzky invented a new way of 4-on-4 offense that slaughtered the opposition so much that the league changed the rules so that simultaneous minors no longer cost a team a player on the ice. Gretzky's gone, let's go back to the rules for normal people.
29 posted on 02/13/2004 7:27:51 PM PST by Colinsky
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Comment #30 Removed by Moderator

To: ambrose
Used to be a big time Kings fan. Have lost interest

I used to be a Kings fan too back in the Dionne, Goring, Simmer, Taylor, Vachon era. Losing teams, but had some great talent.

31 posted on 02/13/2004 7:35:14 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: ambrose
I own a licensed goods retail store in St. Louis and I've been hearing this over and over.

CCM, our hockey vendor, just came out of bankruptcy and I can't even get a hold of them to order jerseys. I'm losing thousands of dollars in sales AND the league is suffering from their vendor's incompetance.

Just another sign that the NHL is broken.

I say bankrupt the entire NHL and cancel all contracts (including their licensed vendors) and start over.

32 posted on 02/13/2004 7:36:05 PM PST by demsux
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To: demsux

This is the logo for the Green Bay Gamblers, part of the USHL league. Great amateur hockey action.

33 posted on 02/13/2004 7:38:05 PM PST by ServesURight (FReecerely Yours,)
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To: ValenB4
Go Flyers!

I just have to ask . . . Do you remember the book Only the Lord Saves More Than Bernie.

34 posted on 02/13/2004 8:21:32 PM PST by reformed_democrat
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To: Pokey78
Old time hockey! Eddie Shore! God that was great movie!
35 posted on 02/13/2004 10:18:26 PM PST by commish (Freedom Tastes Sweetest to Those Who Have Fought to Preserve It)
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To: ValenB4
Go Flyers!

I think the NHL is saying the same thing. If the Flyers end Philly's 21 year drought, it'll do wonders for the league.

Damn shame what that nasty puck did to JR last night. Hope he's back for the playoffs.

36 posted on 02/13/2004 10:55:10 PM PST by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard ("That's all I'm going to say for now. Quack, quack.")
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
If the Flyers end Philly's 21 year drought

21 years??

Stop your whining there, we're going on 43 years here in Chicago

The last time we won, Philly wasn't even in the league.

*hangs head in shame at the patheticness of Chicago sports

37 posted on 02/13/2004 11:24:46 PM PST by RWR8189 (Its Morning in America Again!)
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To: RWR8189
21 years??

That's for the whole city. It's been 7564 days since Philadelphia won it's last championship, in anything (it was the '83 Sixers, if you ever get the trvia question). At least you had the '85 Bears and a Bulls dynasty to hold you over.

Chicago's got nothing on Philly in the futility dep't.

38 posted on 02/13/2004 11:33:56 PM PST by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard ("That's all I'm going to say for now. Quack, quack.")
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To: All
I'm a Flyer fan also, and hang out on the Philly.com board each playoff season. But I became a fan back in the "Broad Street Bully" days of the early and mid seventies. I loved all the fighting and brawling. It was a combination of hockey, wrestling, and roller derby. Absolutely great stuff. The Flyers, Rangers, and Bruins had some mammoth ice wars.

Guys played without helmets and teeth. The Flyers had Dave Schultz, the Watson brothers, Moose Dupont, and Gary Dornhoffer for brawling and Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke, and Rick MacLeish for scoring. Bernie Parent was the goalie and the team always seemed to be skating two men down because of brawls, but Bernie stopped everything. They won two Stanley Cups. It was a blast.

Hockey today is dying of a thousand cuts. The league went too far in stopping fights, where some referees now declare there won't be a single one with them on the ice. Even the teams' designated fighters or "goons" don't get to drop the gloves with these scoundrels around.

The traditional rough and tumble Canadian game has been changing toward the up and down, fast paced, European style for some time now. To stop it the New Jersey Devils perfected the trap and with it stifled the Detroit Red Wings, an emerging dynasty who had a ton of Soviet players back in the mid 90's. The Devils then went on to several Stanley Cups, and the Wings won a few too. Now every team in the eastern conference imitates the Devils and out west the teams all imitate the Red Wings.

I watch the Flyers every night on satellite, but there's not much reason to care what happens when Calgary plays Ottawa. It's not the same tough and rugged sport as before, although the athletes themselves remain very talented.

Ticket prices are way too high and the player's salaries are absolutely disgraceful, given the shape of the sport. When Bettman tells people to blame him, at least he has it right. He's an NBA guy, for crying out loud. Let's get a real hockey man as commissioner.

One more thing. Long live Don Cherry, the last of the breed who tells it like it is on Hockey Night in Canada. He is the farthest thing from political correctness in the world. We need more like him everywhere around us.

39 posted on 02/14/2004 12:06:17 AM PST by Luke21
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To: RWR8189
I say watch the Chicago Wolves, at least they are going to show home games on tv.
40 posted on 02/14/2004 12:35:42 AM PST by afropick (been off the dem plantation since 1999 and havent looked back!!!!)
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