Welcome to Tampa, Oren and Len
I’m in denial.

He’s gone. It can’t be so… But it is?
The last few months I have not been comfortable with the direction of the Lightning. Seeing Brad Richards go was painful - though I am told it was a done deal for a while. Now this.
John Tortorella may have lost the players at one point or another but I believed in his style and how he handled things. Though there was resentment and bitterness at times between the players adn their coach — he wasn’t paid to be Mr. Popular, he was paid to get results. And for a long time he was doign just that.
The rumors have Barry Melrose taking over here in Tampa… Which I took for a joke the first time the rumor surfaced months ago. I still find it a joke, and Oren Koules will not be investing wisely in his purchase if he has already settled on this choice.
As for John, I wish him only the best as he has brought only the best out of the players here in Tampa. His name being engraved on Lord Stanley’s Cup is proof of that. And I don’t think it will be the last time it occurs either.
Knee-jerk and jerk-jerk
My frustration from last night (and recently) is chronicled. We’ll leave it at that. I’m not a sell out though. I’m a Lightning fan. I’ve endured the Lightning through expansion mediocrity, to first-time-playoff mediocrity, to sub-abysmal status during the late 1990’s… I’ve seen the lows, I’ve blogged the highs. Accepting the 2007-08 team as a bitter pill to swallow isn’t something I am proud of, yet it’s something that has to be done.
The being said, this is just pathetic:
…If you’re like me you probably have no desire to see this mess of a team in person anymore. I’m headed back home for New Years and I was planning to go to a Lightning game and catch the Bucs finale. Now? Neither. And if you are a season-ticket holder, my condolences. Sell your tickets if you can, but I would stop going all together if I were you.
…I’ve had it with this team. They are getting what they deserve - and that’s being among the worst teams in the NHL. Who’s to blame? Everyone but the fans, as far as I can tell. The players appear to be quitting on the coach. The coach can’t get even halfway decent productivity with the players he’s got. The GM is responsible for this roster that has his coach so hamstrung, but his hands are tied by lame-duck, apathetic ownership. Wheee!
Everybody but the fans until the fans make declarations like this. The post is titled “Stop going to games, stop showing up”…
You can agree about Torts (and it’s a renown fact the hockey world doesn’t seem to care for John Tortorella’s style), and know the Jay Feaster situation is a truism… Ownership isn’t so much apathetic (this charge always comes out when a team doesn’t spend the cap on players - be they garbage or good) as dealing with a business transaction that has frozen what it can pay for the on-ice product. Yeah, it’s a shit sandwich and we all have to take a bite…
But taking your ball and going home…?
There’s a name for someone who throws his/her hands up in disgust when his or her team lose or go through a rough patch. Bandwagon Fan. Yeah, there are plenty of reasons to be disgusted with the Lightning. Yes, the ownership-in-limbo status doesn’t give much hope for the future or the current. That being said, do you put the team you hold dear to your heart in a bind by trying to syndicate apathy to the rest of the fanbase, inspired by your own despair? Have the Lightning fans, those enveloped in their disgust, forgotten about the poor times this team has gone through in the past that we suffered and triumphed through? Or have we just grown so soft that we’re going to throw a fit and walk away in a knee-jerk reaction because the team isn’t playing like it’s 2004 again?
That was four year ago. Get over it.
October 5th, 2005 was when you were supposed to stop living on the coattails of a championship (I told you as much on opening night that year). The bad times go with the good times — it’s what endears us to our pro sport teams. We may not like them, but that’s what engraves our teams into our souls.
And for the record, anyone who wants to give up on this team and dump off their tickets — I’ll take them, and I’m sure there are plenty of others who would too.
Exclusivity and Fearmongering
It was announced yesterday that Oren Koules and Co. at OK Hockey have entered into exclusivity with Palace Sports and Entertainment to purchase the Tampa Bay Lightning, the lease to the St. Pete Times Forum and 5 and 1/2 acres of land:
“I am excited we were able to take such a positive first step today,” Koules said in his statement. “Most importantly, we established a clear and direct path so we can work together towards a definitive agreement as quickly as possible.”
I could get into other little factoids from the sale article (hoping for a January finalization of a deal, etc) but it was Tampa Lawyer (and representative of another interested group) Tom Scarritt’s quote that irked me:
“We’re disappointed,” Scarritt said. “But we wish them luck, the city of Tampa luck, and we’ll stand by.”
Seems pretty innocent, right? Disappointment, wishing luck all around… yet the City of Tampa being wished luck? Why would the city need luck on things?
It’s a continuing seed of doubt being laid - consciously or subconsciously (and seeing he’s a lawyer, you bet your ass he’s consciously doing it) - about OK Hockey and the “risks” involved (and when I say risks, I mean relocation) in having an out-of-town group buy a local sports team. You may recall that I touched on this being inserted in the Times story about the Lightning’s suitors. What I didn’t bring up, or print, was local lawyer Steve Burton pulling out the fear-monger card:
“The way I see it,” Burton said, “this is a bulldozer moving under its own inertia with a number of local people interested in stepping up and stopping some of this foolishness.”
Burton was referring to Koules’ attempt to buy the team.
lifted from Saturday’s St. Pete Times article about the competing ownership groups)
Yet I missed something that should put all of Scarritt’s (pun intended?) spin to rest once and for all. Something that should have been recalled by local sports writers as well as fans. For this we’ll jump back to our out of the blue introduction to Oren Koules, Jeff Sherrin and Doug MacLean… August 7th to be exact. Of course the little factoid I want to remind everyone of isn’t from Absolute Hockey, but from Tom Wilson at Palace Sports and Entertainmen. Per my own words:
The team is not relocating and Palace Sports would have received a larger amount of money if they were open to the idea of selling to a relocation-minded group.
I can’t find Wilson’s exact quote from that day but this was re-iterated in the press: Palace Sports wouldn’t be selling the team to a group with relocation plans.
Even if, four months later, local would-be suitors would like you to believe that’s what’s being negotiated.
ownership suitors more competitive than the team?
The St. Pete Times found it more relevant to update the fans about the Lightning suitor situation this morning — putting it on the non-Bucs cover of the Sports section. Within the article, you’re reminded of the fallout between Jeff Sherrin and Oren Koules, re-introduced to the fact Koules has formed OK Hockey (sidenote: It honestly took me a while to realize what OK stood for. True story) and not we learn that Sherrin as well as another potential group are ramping up bids for the Lightning.
This doesn’t ease my mind.
Damian goes on to write a post on his blog about local ownership — and plays down the local-versus-non-local ownership situation. In fact, I was going to take a jab at the print article — seemingly writing off Koules as an out-of-towner businessman and forgot the tidbit from this summer where Koules, MacLean and Sherrin all said they planned to move to Tampa.
Yet here’s the thing that Absolutely (pun intended) worries me about any and all potential ownership groups: Only one is involved in the entertainment industry and the rest are in real estate or lawyers. Sure, you need to start somewhere to get into this business but it bothers me that any new owner won’t have professional experience running an arena and running a pro sports team (for those of you who will argue about Jeff Sherrin having Doug MacLean — I submit to you the Columbus Blue Jackets as evidence on the contrary).
Absolute Hockey falls down, goes boom
This falls squarely under the “WTF” category…
Palace Sports nixed the purchase agreement when Absolute Hockey did not come up with a required $5-million payment. Now the investment group has splintered as Coral Springs real estate developer Jeff Sherrin is suing Hollywood producer Oren Koules for allegedly failing on Nov. 13 to make a capital contribution of $4.16-million.
Sherrin is asking $50-million in damages.…
While the deal as originally announced with much fanfare on Aug. 7 is no longer valid, don’t be surprised if a deal is resurrected at a later date with Koules or a group led by him.
Well, looking at the above alone, one can be thankful things fell apart (long term) because if they can’t get their act together to make a money payment - how are they supposed to cover player paychecks and other franchise bills?
This also paves the way for a group of owners minus Sherrin to purchase any other NHL franchise for sale. So the team being sold from Palace Sports to another group with Koules as part of it may or may not happen. Though a team sale would be likely if the right group came along (per Tom Wilson’s quotes from that faithful August 7th morning).
