Much ado about nothing
The WHA has many skeptics, myself chief among them. Joseph at Tasca’s Take feels I am being a little hasty in proclaiming the WHA to be dead on arrival. While he is also skeptical about the WHA’s potential for success, Joseph believes the potential reward is worth the risk. I would tend to agree, but the risk is threatening to magnify beyond it’s worth.
I suppose I would find the WHA a little more worthwhile if those running it didnt appear like chickens with their heads cut off. There is a lot of activity, but no thinking.
I used the XFL as an example simply because Americans would understand the reference. The WHA seems more like the Canadian Baseball League to me. The CBL was a league that ended up being started up last year in a big rush, put teams in markets that made no sense, grabbed some relatively big names but overall very little talent, did no marketing, and was run by people so arrogant they figured Canadians would support the league simply because it was Canadian. The CBL lasted barely half a season before falling to dust.
I see all of these factors in the WHA. The rush is on to try and get teams into buildings, players signed, tickets sold. The lack of preparation will cause a world of problems.
Halifax has no lease, and will be lucky to end up in a substandard arena as the Mooseheads wont be likely to share the Metro Centre. Their owners say they need 7000 fans on average to succeed, and are ignoring that Halifax has already failed numerous times as a pro hockey market. Not to mention that the prices will be $50-80 per ticket, when there already exists a QMJHL team that has a great product and costs less than $20 to attend.
Toronto and Hamilton still dont have leases, and really, there arent any decent arenas available.
Florida doesnt have a home yet, and is in a market that isnt known for financially sucessful hockey teams. Meanwhile, the “Founders Franchise” doesnt have a home because nobody actually wants to own the team. I did notice that the FF mainly drafted players that nobody will care about or miss if it should find no home. Planning for the inevitible.
The WHA buisness plan consists of exactly two things: The NHL remaining dormant, and people remembering the “glory days” of the original WHA, while forgetting that the original league was a financial disaster featuring an unending merry-go-round of franchise relocations, contraction and broken dreams. That WHA actually had real talent. This WHA will be very lucky to match the AHL.
The biggest obstacle will be a lack of financial stability. As Joseph noted, there is no real TV deal. No season tickets are being sold yet, which means that the WHA will have to rely almost exclusively on walk up ticket sales. When the WHA proves to be a minor league, it will draw minor league crowds. And minor league crowds are not enough to survive.
Like the CBL and the XFL, the WHA will end up being just another interesting idea poorly executed. The true winners in all of this will be the established organizations: the AHL, ECHL and Canadian Major Junior, all of which will benifit greatly from a dormant NHL.


July 23rd, 2004 at 2:46 pm
Great rebuttal.
I neglected to mention ticket prices in my article, but that’s an excellent point. I was very shocked to see the price ranges of the WHA franchises.
I will say that, if the league gets off the ground, people will be surprised at the talent level this new league can produce. There is a slew of legitimate talent available in the European and major junior ranks.
The AHL has gone so over the top with their developmental rules in recent years. As of next season, only five “veterans” will be allowed on each AHL team. That means there will be a ton of solid 4th, 5th, 6th - even 10 year pros that have nowhere to play in North America (besides the ECHL, which is also losing teams as we speak). The WHA would be an enticing option.
I think the average hockey fan will be very satisfied with the on-ice product. Satisfied enough to pay $30 a pop, if not more? That’s a tough sell.
July 23rd, 2004 at 6:29 pm
True enough on the current lack of a place for verteran minor leaguers to play in North America. There is another attempt at filling this void also proposing to start up this fall in Canada: the Federal Hockey League.
http://www.federalhockeyleague.ca/
This league has even less going for it than the WHA, especially its decision to put teams in already crowded markets, but hey, if these leagues can pull it off, more power to them.
As for the WHA, it has a chance, but it’s current position is better suited for a league that will launch in October 2005, not two and a half months from now. I can only hope that those backing the WHA are willing to sustain healthy financial losses this year, as that is the only way this league has a chance of surviving.