The Business of HockeyDiscuss the financial and business aspects of the NHL. Franchise sales, valuations, TV contracts, ratings, expansion, relocation, the CBA and work stoppage discussion goes here.
The Rail Cats actually draw fairly well, and their ballpark is a major staple of the Gary community, so they're doing just fine.
Then again, I worked for the Schaumburg Flyers for a season (aka, one of the two reasons why the Northern League collapsed, the other being the Lake County Fielders, who were owned by the same dude), so my views of other independent teams might be a big slanted.
And if I were being completely honest, if I did own the rights to an AHL or ECHL franchise and wanted to stay in the general midwest area, I'd probably look long and hard and the Indianapolis market. You'd have to get rid of the Ice, as I doubt that two teams could be sustainable there, but honestly always thought that Indy, being a downright fantastic minor league town already, would actually be a great fit for either league if done right, the fact that it's already oversaturated as a pro sports market notwithstanding.
I just hate Indy so much... haha. Guess I'll never go see my team
I've never been to the Steel Yard, but driving by it a few times it doesn't seem to be in that bad of area. I could be wrong.
As for another hockey team, there just isn't a need for a 3rd team, as the Express have shown. People don't want to spend the same amount to see 'AA' when they can see 'AAA' in Rosemont.
Most of their success in drawing is because of the fact that they are DIRECTLY off the highway. People wouldn't touch that if they had to enter deep Gary.
Not going to lie, if I was a multimillionaire, I'd seriously consider it (along with bringing a minor league or independent league baseball team to my hometown of Champaign-Urbana).
If you're going to bring something to Champaign-Urbana, how about building a nice 7000-10000 seat building and putting up the cash for U of I to go Division I in hockey, joining the Big Ten league that's coming in 2013-14?
I've always said that U of I and Northwestern should have Division I teams; UIC made it work for a decade, so U of I and Northwestern, with greater financial resources and recruiting reach, should be able to make a go of it.
If you're going to bring something to Champaign-Urbana, how about building a nice 7000-10000 seat building and putting up the cash for U of I to go Division I in hockey, joining the Big Ten league that's coming in 2013-14?
I've always said that U of I and Northwestern should have Division I teams; UIC made it work for a decade, so U of I and Northwestern, with greater financial resources and recruiting reach, should be able to make a go of it.
I agree (except for Northwestern, as Chicagoland already has the NHL and AHL plus Northwestern doesn't really have a strong track record of athletic support), but problem is that building a hockey arena and funding a men's and women's Division I hockey program would probably come close to costing $100 million, while building a similarly sized baseball park and independent league team attached to it would probably barely crack $10 million. Not to mention that, as owner of a baseball team, I could actually slowly recoup losses with team profits, whereas that wouldn't be an option for a donation to the university.
Plus, the Illinois athletic department's turned into a massive ****show over the past decade, so I wouldn't trust them with a dime so much as millions of my hypothetical imaginary dollars.
I'm in. But I don't think leagues often allow shareholder ownership. Usually needs to be a smaller group with a majority ownership who acts as a representative.
The larger problem by far is keeping 5,000 people interested in covering annual operating costs.
The British soccer analogue ran into this problem... once they actually bought the club and people realized that a) they were essentially just playing a Football Manager video game, only with some random non-league club instead of one they cared about and b) that "ownership" granted them no actual privileges because they owned 1/30,000th of the team and c) everyone forgot about it just like people forget about any boring browser based video game like NationStates or whatever.
Eventually it got to the point where only 800 people were renewing their memberships
The British soccer analogue ran into this problem... once they actually bought the club and people realized that a) they were essentially just playing a Football Manager video game, only with some random non-league club instead of one they cared about and b) that "ownership" granted them no actual privileges because they owned 1/30,000th of the team and c) everyone forgot about it just like people forget about any boring browser based video game like NationStates or whatever.
Well see, that's usually gonna be a big problem.
A substantial discount on tickets and one free ticket for "fan appreciation" would be the ideal place to start.
After all, if you have that many people pumping money into a team, than the team can afford to lose ticket revenue to keep those people happy. I mean it's essentially a season ticket holder package but less so.
Giving your share holders a say, 40% discount on tickets is just the right thing to do.
I went to a Brass game once. It was held in old municipal auditorium and it was one strange experience. There were seats where you could only see half the ice, the players came off the rink right by a beer booth. When I reminded some of them that it was a "contact sport", a couple of guys stepped off the rubber mat and headed my way. Thankfully an attentive NOLA PD was nearby and nobody got their butt kicked or shot. I did like the brass band that played jazz during the breaks.
If I win the lottery, I'm moving to Perdido Key and starting a team in Orange Beach. I'll call them the Bushwackers.
Most minor leagues have operating caps for player costs to promote parity, but unless you have a PDC, that will be a fluctuating cost through the year. Typically, the biggest costs are operating (rent, utilities, travel, medical). You can only spend what you make or losses pile up and few people operate teams as a charity (anymore, that is).
Oh, and ECHL teams are routinely valued in the millions, not hundreds of thousands. You might be able to sneak into a lower league like the UHL or CHL for hundreds of thousands, but not the ECHL. AHL team values are also skyrocketing, and while the PDC covers a lot of player costs, travel costs grow since NHL teams don't want you transporting their valuable prospects around in date buses.