Del Biaggio ends effort to bring NHL to KC

2 08 2007

source: Kansas City Business Journal

William “Boots” Del Biaggio III has ended his efforts to bring a National Hockey League team to Kansas City.

Del Biaggio joined a group of Nashville-area investors who on Wednesday signed a letter of intent to buy the Nashville Predators from Craig Leipold.
Once the sale is approved, Del Biaggio will be a minority owner of the Predators. He also is a minority owner of the San Jose Sharks.

Del Biaggio said this ends an agreement he had with Anschutz Entertainment Group to move an NHL team to the Sprint Center.

“I will now be part of the Nashville ownership group, and I’m 100 percent committed to Nashville,” he said. “Now the people of Nashville have a chance to make it work here. If it doesn’t work and the team is no longer financially viable, the Nashville Predators will have to look at all their options.”

Del Biaggio said the situation is actually good news for Kansas City because it will make the NHL healthier and allow the NHL Board of Governors to consider expansion.

“My hope is Kansas City will get expansion if and when the NHL Board of Governors looks at the issue,” Del Biaggio said.

Asked whether his name might come up again if it becomes apparent Kansas City could get an expansion team, Del Biaggio said, “My answer to that would be, I’m very interested in being a majority owner of an NHL hockey team.”

AEG representatives could not be immediately reached for comment Wednesday.

The Nashville investment group is led by David Freeman, a Nashville venture capitalist and former CEO of Commodore Medical Services. Leipold said in a news conference Wednesday that the Nashville investment group is expected to make a $10 million down payment before September to enable a binding purchase agreement. The NHL owners then could formally evaluate the bid before the start of the regular season.

The Nashville group is said to be offering around $180 million for the team.

The group began pursuing a Predators deal when Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie struck an agreement to buy the team for $220 million. The Balsillie deal went sour shortly after the co-CEO of Research In Motion began taking steps to move the team to Hamilton, Ontario — including the sale of prospective tickets through the Canadian arm of Ticketmaster.

The prospect of the team leaving Nashville spurred a push by local business leaders to boost season ticket sales.

As long as the Predators average more than 14,000 seats sold per game, the team is locked into its lease in Nashville through 2028.




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2006-2007 Goalie Stats

1 08 2007

source: NHL.com

2006-2007 - Playoffs - Goalie - GAA Leaders - GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE

RK

Player Team GP SA GA GAA W L OT Sv Sv% SO G A PIM TOI
1 Marty Turco DAL 7 229 11 1.30 3 4   0 218 .952 3 0 0 4 509:13
2 Roberto Luongo VAN 12 427 25 1.77 5 7   0 402 .941 0 0 0 0 847:26
3 Dominik Hasek DET 18 444 34 1.79 10 8   0 410 .923 2 0 0 2 1,139:49
4 Jean-Sebastien Giguere ANA 18 451 35 1.97 13 4   0 416 .922 1 0 0 0 1,067:04
5 Henrik Lundqvist NYR 10 291 22 2.07 6 4   0 269 .924 1 0 0 0 637:25
6 Ryan Miller BUF 16 489 38 2.22 9 7   0 451 .922 0 0 0 2 1,029:03
7 Niklas Backstrom MIN 5 145 11 2.22 1 4   0 134 .924 0 0 1 2 296:39
8 Yevgeni Nabokov SJS 11 323 26 2.23 6 5   0 297 .920 1 0 0 0 700:50
9 Ilja Bryzgalov ANA 5 128 10 2.25 3 1   0 118 .922 0 0 0 0 266:51
10 Ray Emery OTT 20 505 47 2.26 13 7   0 458 .907 3 0 2 0 1,248:37
11 Martin Brodeur NJD 11 332 28 2.44 5 6   0 304 .916 1 0 1 2 688:06
12 Johan Hedberg ATL 2 69 5 2.56 0 2   0 64 .928 0 0 0 0 117:29
13 Miikka Kiprusoff CGY 6 255 18 2.81 2 4   0 237 .929 0 0 0 0 383:35
14 Johan Holmqvist TBL 6 168 18 2.92 2 4   0 150 .893 0 0 0 0 369:56
15 Tomas Vokoun NSH 5 163 16 2.96 1 4   0 147 .902 0 0 0 2 323:38
16 Rick Dipietro NYI 4 127 13 3.31 1 3   0 114 .898 0 0 0 0 236:19
17 Marc-Andre Fleury PIT 5 150 18 3.76 1 4   0 132 .880 0 0 0 0 286:42
18 Wade Dubielewicz NYI 1 35 4 4.07 0 1   0 31 .886 0 0 0 0 59:03
19 Kari Lehtonen ATL 2 73 11 5.59 0 2   0 62 .849 0 0 0 0 118:04



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Hull to work for Stars full time; Taylor named director of player personnel

1 08 2007

source: ESPN.com 

DALLAS — Brett Hull is leaving television after a year to work full time for the Dallas Stars in their front office.

The Stars on Tuesday made Hull a special adviser to hockey operations and named former Los Angeles Kings general manager Dave Taylor the director of player personnel.

The 43-year-old Hull, who helped the Stars win the Stanley Cup in 1999, was a studio analyst on NBC last year while in a part-time role as special assistant to Stars president Jim Lites.

“I have always wanted to help a team win the Stanley Cup from the business side of things,” Hull said. “I am excited about this next challenge in my life and look forward to working with the entire hockey operations department on a deeper level.”

Hull is third on the NHL’s career goals list with 741 and won another Stanley Cup with Detroit in 2002. The eight-time All-Star played for the U.S. in the 1998 and 2002 Olympics.

Taylor was the Kings’ director of amateur development last season after nine years as the team’s GM. As a player, Taylor was the Kings’ all-time leader in games at 1,111, scoring 1,069 points.

“Dave brings a wealth of experience and success from his general manager days to his playing days that will prove invaluable to this organization,” said Stars general manager Doug Armstrong.




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