From the Associated Press :
An investment firm and a sports advisory company reportedly made a joint proposal to buy all 30 NHL teams for as much as $3.5 billion.
Bain Capital Partners LLC and Game Plan International, both based in Boston, made the offer in a 30-minute presentation to NHL owners on Tuesday in New York, sources told the Toronto Star. The companies were invited to make their pitch by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman.
Bain managing partner Steven Pagliuca, co-owner of the NBA’s Boston Celtics, and Game Plan, which recently acted as an adviser on the sale of the Ottawa Senators, are betting that many NHL owners would welcome the chance to get out of the hockey business.
The NHL, which because of its ongoing player lockout recently became the first major North American pro sports league to cancel an entire season, has said its teams have lost a collective $500 million over the past two seasons.
It’s unclear if team owners, especially those in large markets such as Toronto, Boston and New York, would accept the offer. Maple Leafs officials declined comment, as did a Game Plan spokesman.
NHL executive vice president Bill Daly was cautious in describing the level of interest the proposal received from the governors.
“I’m not going to characterize it,” Daly told the Globe and Mail. “I would imagine different clubs had different feelings. The board listened to a presentation and that’s about it.”
Daly said the league was compelled to listen based on the significance of the offer.
“When someone’s offering over $3 billion, we felt we had an obligation to the board to have them, at least, hear it from the proposed purchaser,” Daly added.
The purchase would not be dependent on the NHL reaching agreement with the players on a collective bargaining deal, and a sale would not affect the status of the NHL Players’ Association as the bargaining agent for players under U.S. and Canadian labor laws.
Though I have no reason to doubt the validity of the above story, would could be more useful in terms of threatening the players association than the prospect of one entity owning all 30 clubs? It’s worked so well for that sporting monolith the MLS, who wouldn’t welcome the end of genuine competition?
Remember, when the corporation controls the teams, it’s no longer hockey — it’s Rollerball.