SportsBusiness Daily — Sports Business Resources — your sports business news and information source. Learn More
Advanced
Home About Us Advertise With Us Marketplace/Classifieds College & University Program Subscribe/Trial My Account

Wednesday
August 19, 2009
Print This Issue


 
MOST VIEWED STORIES
View the top 20 stories
 
Recent Issues
Franchises

NHL Renews Effort To Assume Control Of Coyotes From Moyes

NHL Seeking To Assume
Control Of The Coyotes
The NHL is "renewing its bid to assume control" of the Coyotes, "thereby further thwarting efforts" by RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie to acquire the franchise, according to Daniel Nolan of the HAMILTON SPECTATOR. The league first filed this court request in May "after the team skated into the bankruptcy court, and revived it in a court filing yesterday after court-ordered mediation did not produce any results." The NHL in the new court filing indicated that it "wants to assert 'lawful control' of the team to prevent further financial harm to it, and the interest of legitimate creditors," by Balsillie and current Owner Jerry Moyes. The league alleges cases filed by Balsillie and Moyes were "not filed in good faith to stave off an impending financial crisis or to effect a reorganization for the good of the creditors," but rather are "part of a self-serving scheme to advance the interests of just two parties" (Hamilton SPECTATOR, 8/19).

ON THE ATTACK: In Toronto, Paul Hunter notes the NHL filing argues that Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly should "manage the business efforts of the Coyotes, rather than Moyes, and a bankruptcy trustee should replace Moyes at the team's helm." The filing serves as "another assault on Balsillie and his motives in advance" of the September 2 hearing that will determine whether he can participate in the September 10 auction of the franchise. The NHL in the filing contends Moyes "sold out to Mr. Balsillie and his bankruptcy scheme, electing to advance his self-interest while dishonouring his fiduciary duties to the NHL, the City of Glendale and the other creditors." The document also alleges that Moyes attorney Earl Scudder "passed information" to Balsillie lawyer Richard Rodier about a $14.6M tax subsidy that Bulls and White Sox Chair Jerry Reinsdorf was proposing as part of his bid to acquire the Coyotes. E-mails in the NHL filing show that Rodier and Scudder "discussed leaking the information" to Phoenix-based government watchdog the Goldwater Institute (TORONTO STAR, 8/19). However, both Rodier and the Goldwater Institute "denied any communication." Goldwater attorney Carrie Ann Stiren: "I've never heard of Richard Rodier before, and neither has anyone else at the Goldwater Institute that I'm aware of." Rodier said, "I have never had any contact whatsoever with anyone from the Goldwater Institute" (ARIZONA REPUBLIC, 8/19).

WAITING ON SOME ANSWERS: The GLOBE & MAIL's David Shoalts reports Bankruptcy Court Judge Redfield Baum yesterday "did not issue an immediate ruling" on whether Rodier "would be barred from taking part in the questioning of NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and other league executives." The league also asked the court to "rule that no matter who wins the auction" on September 10, that the team "cannot be moved from suburban Glendale for the 2009-10 season." Daly argued against a move "on a number of fronts from scheduling problems to television contracts to travel bookings" (GLOBE & MAIL, 8/19).

Writer Says NHL Should Welcome 
Balsillie As An Owner
BLACKBERRY JAM: In Ottawa, Mark Sutcliffe wrote Canada "needs more business leaders" like Balsillie, and the NHL "should be welcoming him with open arms." Balsillie "does seem to relish going outside normal channels, even if it infuriates others," including using a "bankruptcy law expert to help him craft a risky strategy that could steal the franchise away from other bidders against the will of the league." But "battling for opportunities doesn't make Balsillie a demon, it makes him a capitalist." Sutcliffe: "In a league that is still dominated by an old boys' club that is keeping the sport in the last century, Balsillie would be a breath of fresh air. He's clever, innovative and in touch with the next generation of customers. He'd probably do more for the league in a month than Gary Bettman has done in 10 years" (OTTAWA CITIZEN, 8/15).


Get A Free Trial To SportsBusiness Daily

Reader Comments

To post comments on this article, log in or register for a free trial.

Related Stories By Company Related Stories By Sport
Paul Kelly Talks About Issues In Hockey
March 12, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

NHL Eastern Conference Attendance Down
March 11, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Bettman: Coyotes Sale A Work In Progress
March 11, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

NHL Competition Committee Influential
March 11, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Crosby Explains Passing On "Late Show"
March 11, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Preds Staying Put Until At Least 2012
March 15, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Effort Begins To Lure Wings To Auburn Hills
March 15, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

What's Ted Leonsis Up To This Weekend?
March 12, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Mayor Wants Arena For Pistons, Wings
March 12, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Paul Kelly Talks About Issues In Hockey
March 12, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

ALSO IN THIS SECTION


A Publication of Street & Smith's Sports Group.
Use of and/or registration on any portion of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (REVISED 2009-06-23) and Privacy Policy (REVISED 2009-06-23).

© 2010 Street & Smith's Sports Group and its licensors. All rights reserved.
The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Street & Smith's Sports Group.