In about the time it takes to complete a 10-yard pass, the Beechcraft King Air 200 is airborne, and the pilot, Michael Bidwill, turns tour guide.
That's Camelback Mountain just ahead, he says. To the northeast are the McDowell Mountains. Prescott Valley is at about 10 o'clock. That speck of white on the horizon? That's San Francisco Peak.
The landmarks that define Bidwill's nine years as Cardinals vice president and general counsel pass unmentioned.
To the southwest is where the new stadium would be had the Rio Salado Crossing project been approved in 1999. Nearby is Sun Devil Stadium, where the Cardinals draw fewer fans than any other NFL team, and Arizona State University, which Michael and the Cardinals sued.
A little west of that is the office of Fiesta Bowl officials, who butt heads with the Bidwill family business, still headed by patriarch Bill, almost as regularly as do the team's NFC West opponents.
To the far west, in the middle of Glendale farmland, rises Michael Bidwill's crowning achievement: the $370.6 million stadium set to open in fall 2006.
At a top speed of about 300 mph, it's 18 minutes to Sedona, today's destination. An air-traffic controller tells Bidwill there's an airliner approaching at about 1 o'clock. There's no danger, but large planes sometimes cause air disturbances, much like a boat produces a wake.
Many people would say that's a perfect metaphor for the way Bidwill does business: intent on reaching his destination, with little regard for relationships that might be bounced around along the way.
Critics call Bidwill arrogant, condescending and mean-spirited. Most of them decline to talk for publication. Supporters say he is just a hard-charging businessman with the right attitude to transform an organization defined by failure.
Few seem to doubt that Bidwill's motivation is winning and cleansing his family name.
But at what price? Friendships? Goodwill?
If there is a likable personality beneath Bidwill's suit, many people don't see it.
"I kind of felt sometimes it was like working with an attorney and you say, 'Can you take off your attorney mask for a second and just be a person?' " says Bill Jaffa, a former Mesa city councilman who spent time with Bidwill working on stadium issues. "Sometimes it was difficult to get down to all those layers."
Bidwill's response?
"The fact of the matter is, I am a lawyer," he says, wryly.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/0626bidwill0626.html
That's Camelback Mountain just ahead, he says. To the northeast are the McDowell Mountains. Prescott Valley is at about 10 o'clock. That speck of white on the horizon? That's San Francisco Peak.
The landmarks that define Bidwill's nine years as Cardinals vice president and general counsel pass unmentioned.
To the southwest is where the new stadium would be had the Rio Salado Crossing project been approved in 1999. Nearby is Sun Devil Stadium, where the Cardinals draw fewer fans than any other NFL team, and Arizona State University, which Michael and the Cardinals sued.
A little west of that is the office of Fiesta Bowl officials, who butt heads with the Bidwill family business, still headed by patriarch Bill, almost as regularly as do the team's NFC West opponents.
To the far west, in the middle of Glendale farmland, rises Michael Bidwill's crowning achievement: the $370.6 million stadium set to open in fall 2006.
At a top speed of about 300 mph, it's 18 minutes to Sedona, today's destination. An air-traffic controller tells Bidwill there's an airliner approaching at about 1 o'clock. There's no danger, but large planes sometimes cause air disturbances, much like a boat produces a wake.
Many people would say that's a perfect metaphor for the way Bidwill does business: intent on reaching his destination, with little regard for relationships that might be bounced around along the way.
Critics call Bidwill arrogant, condescending and mean-spirited. Most of them decline to talk for publication. Supporters say he is just a hard-charging businessman with the right attitude to transform an organization defined by failure.
Few seem to doubt that Bidwill's motivation is winning and cleansing his family name.
But at what price? Friendships? Goodwill?
If there is a likable personality beneath Bidwill's suit, many people don't see it.
"I kind of felt sometimes it was like working with an attorney and you say, 'Can you take off your attorney mask for a second and just be a person?' " says Bill Jaffa, a former Mesa city councilman who spent time with Bidwill working on stadium issues. "Sometimes it was difficult to get down to all those layers."
Bidwill's response?
"The fact of the matter is, I am a lawyer," he says, wryly.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/0626bidwill0626.html