Town Drunk said:
I don’t need any quotes. I watched the game in the late 70’s, 80’s, and early 90’s. The players back then had just as much skill as the players today. Today, thanks partly to expansion; you have 3rd and 4th liners who belong in the AHL.
Again, give me a team full of Bossy’s and Mikita’s in their primes, and have them play today’s All Stars, and I don’t think it would even be close, IMO. Those guys were just phenomenal hockey players. Throw in some Bobby Clarke’s to rough them up a bit too.
USA hockey has taken some good steps, yes. But make no mistake, Canada still dominates hockey. I’m pretty sure they hold all three golds this year.
Canada does still produce a large chunk of the best hockey players, but the gap is rapidly closing. When you have more players playing the game all over the world, the talent level is going to dramatically rise. I dont deny that there are many great players of yesteryear, but it is clear that the average and checking line guys are much much improved over those of the 70s and 80s.
I bring up re-located teams because they’re just as bad as expansion teams. In fact, I do believe the Coyotes have lost more money in Phoenix then they did in Winnipeg. I’m entirely sure on that though, but it’s what I’ve heard from several people. And I wouldn’t call Carolina and possibly Phoenix “vastly” better than a city like Winnipeg.
The conditions for a franchise in Phoenix are way better than they ever were in Winnipeg. For one, the Coyotes LOWEST average attendance in their history is only about 400 seats below Winnipegs HIGHEST ever. Also, Winnipeg's average attendance never, ever hit 14k, and was below the league average for twelve years in a row.
Let's put it this way. The conditions in Winnipeg were so bad for the Jets that a new ownership group was willing to move the team even though they knew that they were going to be in an arena unsuitable for hockey with even more obstructed seats, with almost all of the concession/parking/etc money not even going to them for several years, and that a new arena was years away, and not even a guarantee at the time. With the new arena, these problems dont exist. We finally have an arena suitable for NHL hockey, where all the money spent in it goes to the team, and decent attendance to boot. Phoenix (and the Glendale area in particular), are growing rapidly and coupled with the solid economy of the area and the new arena on top of the already existent solid fan base, things will only go up.
Furthermore, according to Forbes Magazine, for the last few years, the Coyotes have had a higher franchise value and more total revenue coming in than (among others) Edmonton. Thus, in order to be a better franchise location financially than Phoenix, Winnipeg would have to be a better franchise location than Edmonton. How is this possible when Edmonton is a city with a larger population, better economy, and larger NHL fan base than Winnipeg?
Lets take a little closer look at the economy of Winnipeg. The Canadian Taxpayer Federation had this to say about the Manitoba economy...
"There is little question that Manitoba’s economy has been underperforming for many years. Though not the worst economy in the country, Manitoba ranks 8th among the provinces, when measuring average economic growth between 1993 and projected 2005. In that same time frame, the national average for Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth was 5.21 per cent, while
Manitoba showed a meager 4.48 per cent annual growth rate....In every case, Manitoba is set to grow slower than the rest of the country. In 2004 the national average for expected real GDP growth is 3.3 per cent, employment is 1.5 per cent and retail sales is 4.5 per cent. Despite low inflation and an unemployment rate that is the lowest in the country, (5.0 per cent in 2003) neither have contributed toward greater buoyancy in Manitoba’s economy. That is a worrisome trend when one considers the fiscal pressures that will be exerted on the province over the next ten to fifteen years."
Underperforming, meager, slow growth, and worrisome? Yeah, things are looking real promising there. Furthermore, according to Statistics Canada, the average Manitoban makes only $653.90 a week, below the Canadian average $704.88. This is also well under the figures of $741.89 and $742.56 of Alberta and Ontario, respectively.
This figure is increasingly significant when one factors that in order to be successful in the eyes of a potential owner, in order to be more viable than Carolina/Phoenix, Winnipeg would have to unquestionably be a better marketplace than the two Alberta franchises of Calgary and Edmonton due to their financial standing outlined a few posts ago. Winnipeg is clearly not. Not only are they much smaller in population, but the economy is weaker, and their own history of the franchise the first time is against them.
So, because they’re currently doing better than some of the older teams, they can’t be labeled as failures? Even though they’re in the bottom half of the league financially and attendance wise? Right, Pittsburg, Edmonton, and Buffalo aren’t doing well. And I’d contract Pittsburg, Buffalo, Atlanta, Nashville, Anaheim, and a couple others. I’d keep Edmonton because they have the storied past, and the chances are good their organization can turn things around.
Again, because the owners think they can hold out for more. That may or may not happen.
But if the league was in such dire straights, why not set up some sort of revenue sharing between the owners? If they’re in dire straights financially, why did they pay the big contracts to the players?
On a side note, does anyone know how to turn off the emails you get sent every time someone replies to a thread on here? I’ve gotten over 40 of them today!
Using your numbers a few posts ago, you said that 8 relocated or expansion teams are in the bottom 15, with 5 in the bottom 10. Using what I assume were your 8 choices, I counted 13 teams total that relocated/expanded in the same time period, or almost half the league. So, if half the league is expansion/relocated teams using your definition, shouldnt half the teams in the bottom 15 or 10 be expansion or relocated teams? Last time I checked, 8 out of 15 and 5 out of 10 was roughly half.