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    Showing posts with label finance. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label finance. Show all posts

    Thursday, 8 November 2007

    The Nightmare in Bisonland Is Over...

    ...but across the county line in Berkshire it may be just beginning. The rumour mentioned yesterday which linked Basingstoke with a Swedish saviour was, it appears, accurate, as David Taylor has been forced out of the Silverdome in favour of Tomas Enerston, a Swedish IT company owner who is new to the UK hockey scene. The news was announced as the man himself addressed around 350 fans at an emergency Fans' Forum in Basingstoke this evening, along with a new arrival for the Herd in Mikko Purontakanen, a defenseman from the Finnish Elite League who is on a 4-week trial to cover for the injured Kyle Peto. The news has been greeted with great joy by Bison fans, and well it should be, as the demise of Bison was looking more and more likely in recent weeks. On a personal note, I'm overjoyed by this, partly for the reasons in this post but mainly due to the fact that the last thing British hockey needed (and still needs), having gained a bit more exposure through the Sky Sports deal, was one of its clubs in the top league to go bankrupt. The new owner has made a positive first impression, with Bison fans praising his forthrightness and honesty when admitting that success would probably not come straight away, as well as his personality. Judge for yourself as BBC Berkshire has coverage of the fan's forum and a short interview with the new owner here-reading it and listening certainly gives a very good impression indeed, particularly with quotes such as...

    ""If there's bad news, you'll hear it. If there's good news, you'll hear it. It's going to be a very, very straight line."

    Now that sounds like a man who intends to keep the fans fully up to date with what's going on-one of the major problems which seem to afflict several UK clubs, particularly when it comes to bad news. And as for marketing-

    "If you don't tell anybody you're playing hockey, they don't know you're playing hockey. Marketing is what's needed on every level."

    Are you listening, Elite League, and indeed every club within it? It seems that a lot of clubs (yes, including mine in Coventry) do so much and then stop. In this world, push, push, push is what's needed-there have been strides made this season, certainly-but here is a man who knows what is required to make the sport a force in this country.

    "Look at the website, it looks pretty good, there's business names and you think oh, good, there must be sponsors. But you've only got one sponsor. An Elite hockey team with one sponsor, and do I need to say it's not even a major sponsor? It's one sponsor."

    Ouch. But this is certainly straight-talking of the highest order.

    On first impressions (and with Mr Enerston appearing live on BBC Berkshire tomorrow evening, those can be cemented or changed still), it appears that the Bison have a rough diamond. Hockey fans of at least one Southern team will certainly sleep far easier from now on...

    But it's not all rosy. With David Taylor's company Berkshire Sports Marketing Ltd now clearly in trouble, fans of his "other" team, the Bracknell Bees, are surely seriously worried by events in Berkshire this week. With the players now in open revolt against the ownership, as detailed here, the Taylors have released a statement which is markedly similar to that released two weeks ago or so regarding the Bison issues-although the language is noticeably friendlier. It appears that the issues may be resolved for this week at least-however, with the current EPL champions facing such uncertainty and an owner who has clearly lost the trust of his players, fans are already wondering if the Bees could face the same uncertain period as the Bison have recently, and if so, who could be found to save them.

    One thing is for certain from reading the various forums-the Taylors are now distrusted by a large number of fans of their former and current clubs, and things aren't over in Bracknell. However, for the Bison at least, things are finally starting to really look up...

    Keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Tuesday, 6 November 2007

    More Swings and Roundabouts...

    Quiet week because of no midweek games? It would appear not...

    Panthers release P.C Drouin: This one comes right out of left-field...we knew that there was a chance the Cats would make changes, but releasing a returning Panthers legend, one of their top earners and an assistant coach to boot is a drastic change, which has split the Panthers fanbase right down the middle. My thoughts are the same as a lot of others in that it's more a case of needing the money than Drouin himself not performing-there are several players on the Panthers roster that were rumoured to be for the chop ahead of the Quebec native. Of course, this does make the return of Dan Tessier, as mentioned here , a little more likely-although with the Panthers' main woes this season in conceding goals rather than really scoring them, a big d-man is also another possible option. Knowing the Panthers crowd, though, the calls for a natural centre such as Tessier (or indeed Trevor Gallant, who performed so well for them in the playoffs last season) in order to kick-start Sean McAslan and Johan Molin will be growing louder and louder...Drouin himself, meanwhile, is apparently being courted by Manchester, who just happen to be in the market for a speedy goalscorer...

    Colin Hemingway to Vipers?: Things continue to look a little less than rosy for the Capitals, with their best player this season linked this week with a move just south of the border to Newcastle. Sergiy Rublivskiy has been taking some heat for not scoring as often as expected, and Hemingway would be an ideal replacement for the Russian. With Caps' prolific centre himself supposedly saying he's prepared to stay and ride out the storm in Scotland, however, this one may be on the back burner.

    Bison saved by Swede?: The Bison saga takes another twist, with a fans' forum being called unexpectedly for this Thursday. Rumours are yet flying around of a takeover bid by an owner new to this country-one who is rumouredly also interested in the Cardiff Devils. The weary Bison fanbase are finally allowing themselves to hope for some good news-we shall see on Friday morning whether there will be celebrations or wailing and gnashing of teeth in Hampshire...

    That's all for now-keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Friday, 2 November 2007

    Blood In The Water...

    ...and it appears the sharks are circling.

    Ben O'Connor (see the rumour post below) is the latest player to leave Basingstoke as confirmed here, which makes two in as many days after Slava Koulikov was released on the signing of Curtis Cruikshank. Panic is beginning to spread in Hampshire as rumours spread of players not being paid for three weeks and refusing to train until they get paid, while posts like this are becoming the norm on fan forums all over the Internet. I cover the ongoing difficulties on Basingstoke in posts here, here, and here, with the Taylors (Bison owners) responding to the concerns here. Over the past few weeks things, while not exactly rosy, have at least looked better in the deep south, but now the silence is deafening from the ownership, and Bison fans everywhere are seemingly bracing themselves for the worst.

    Off on a personal tangent here-some of my best memories of watching hockey come from following the Blaze down to Basingstoke-not so much because of the games themselves (although, in the eight years Bison and Blaze have been in the same division, the Silverdome has always been a fairly happy hunting ground) but because of the feel you got from the place. Sure, the rink isn't the best-it's bloody cold, the puck can get lost in the rafters and the view from the away section is only tolerable if you're right down the far end thanks to the siting of the DJ box. But it's a hockey town-the crowd aren't the biggest but they're passionate, the team always work hard, and unlike some teams (Hull, anyone?) you never go to a game thinking "oh, God, it's Basingstoke tonight", no matter how low in the league they may be.

    In Coventry we've been pretty lucky-we've watched other teams die slowly and said "oh, how terrible" (although Manchester, one of the teams, has now returned and is running nicely), but for some reason this one has worried me more than all the others, maybe due to the fact that games against the Bison have become a part of mine and others' personal hockey landscape, like that friend who you just get used to having around. They may not be the best, the funniest or the most lively, but even so, when they're not there for whatever reason, everyone notices their absence, and the parties or whatever event is taking place are the poorer for it.

    I have the feeling the Bison (along with the Capitals, perhaps) are that "unsung friendship" team for a lot of fans (or will be if they do go bankrupt), whether their team is in the Elite League or used to face them in the old BNL-and that's why it would be such a tragedy if the team were allowed to die.

    For now, though, the Bison survive, although few people know for how long. For the sake of hockey in the UK, I hope it will be for many years...

    Keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Wednesday, 17 October 2007

    Bison Problems Begin to Surface: Campbell and Lyle leave

    Remember this post yesterday, and this one last week? It appears that all the rumblings about the Bison problems are true-BelfasatGiants have officially announced today that sniper Peter Campbell and starting goalie Stevie Lyle have left the Basingstoke Bison and signed for them, and all hell has broken loose on the forums around the EIHL.



    Personally I feel a bit confused by this-both the destination of the two players and the fact that there are indeed problems at the Bison in the first place. Firstly, the pressing issue-the problems at the Bison: As I mentioned last week, Bison are traditionally a well-run club, and although not having the biggest crowds in the league are one of the best-supported-you can always guarantee that their rink will be pretty full when you travel down there, especially for the Saturday night games. As recently as two weeks ago, owner David Taylor released a statement via the official website in response to the original story in the South Wales Echo, in which he was quoted as saying:



    "Nothing has changed full-stop, financially or team-wise. Our team remains the same, we are still 100 per cent behind our Coach Ryan Aldridge in bringing success to Basingstoke in the Elite League. It's a shame these sort of rumours are allowed to be bounded around."



    This was then followed up by the Elite League meeting this month being told that Bison would be around until at least the end of the season in their current form, again, allegedly by Mr Taylor himself.



    Do they sound like the words of an owner whose team is losing (allegedly) two thousand pounds a week? Not to me they don't...and many Bison fans were reassured by this. However, two weeks down the line this argument is blown out of the water by his team releasing two of its highest-paid players, who immediately sign for another EIHL team, which says to me that either the club owners have been aware of this and monitoring the situation closely, or that the players are unsettled and have actively been looking for new jobs, in which case there is nothing to say that we won't see more players leave the Bison in the near future. Either way, it doesn't look good for either Bison or, by extension, the other teams in the league-not so much because of the money problems themselves (those, we can at least hope, are isolated in Hampshire and easily solvable) but because the clubs actively sought to keep this quiet and keep taking money from a very loyal and long-standing fanbase who, as has been shown by their reaction, will do anything to help save the hockey team they love.



    The problem with this situation is that it's followed the classic path taken by Ayr, Manchester and the London Racers when they folded-unfounded rumours which were then denied by the club and indeed the league right up to the point where players were suddenly leaving and an entire fan-base were going "oh, s...., we've got problems here". Why do owners seemingly not learn from other mistakes?



    This couldn't have come at a worse time, with the Elite League making inroads into mainstream media with the Sky coverage, awareness of British hockey being helped no end by the NHL games which took place in late September in London, and a league which has reached its most competitive since being founded four years ago.

    Like me, every British hockey fan is looking at the events in Basingstoke thinking "there but for the grace of God goes my team", and it's not a pleasant feeling for any of us...

    Needless to say, the Breakaway's best wishes go out to the Bison, along with an offer to help publicise any fund-raising efforts...

    Tomorrow comes Round the Rinks, where we'll assess what impact these changes will have on both the Bison and the Giants as far as the matches this weekend go, so check back then-especially as the Giants play Cardiff with both Lyle and Campbell slated to make their debuts tomorrow night...

    Bison fans especially, I hope you'll keep keeping your eye on the puck...