There are four so-called community-owned franchises remaining in the WHL.
At the dawn of this century, there were five, but the Kamloops Blazers were sold to private interests prior to the 2007-08 season.
The Lethbridge Hurricanes, Moose Jaw Warriors, Prince Albert Raiders and Swift Current Broncos are community-owned operations. In truth, the franchises are owned by a group of people within the community and run by boards of directors.
You can bet that no one in a position of authority with the WHL will say anything publicly, but the league and its 18 privately owned teams would be quite happy if there weren’t any community-owned franchises.
Why?
Well, there are a number of reasons.
You can start with the fact that the four community-owned teams are run by boards numbering anywhere from nine to 14 or 15 members. The 2008-09 WHL Guide shows Moose Jaw’s board numbering nine, Swift Current with 11 and Prince Albert with 12. (The Raiders are to be commended for having two women on their board.) There is no listing of Lethbridge board members in the Guide, nor does Lethbridge’s website seem to include a list. (However, that same website lists Roy Stasiuk as general manager and Michael Dyck as head coach, almost a month after both were terminated.)
Rightfully or not, the perception is that when the stuff hits the fan with a community-owned team, things almost always end up being a whole lot messier than when it happens with a privately owned team.
For instance, the Everett Silvertips fire their head coach and it’s over and done with in a day or two. There is no drawn-out media-driven circus fuelled by a board with more leaks than a bad goaltender. Even in Regina, where the WHL franchsie has been known to become involved in a circus or two, the Pats changed head coaches in the matter of a few days.
In Lethbridge, meanwhile, the head coach was dumped and the only question was whether it was three rings or four. The announcement was made by the general manager who, as it turned out, the board had decided to fire after he had dumped the coach. The Hurricanes’ board now is searching for a GM who, it’s supposed, will hire a head coach.
In Moose Jaw, most people seem to be in agreement that Chad Lang, whose services as GM were terminated Friday, did a pretty good job, especially in the finance department. The board, however, decided to run him out the door and split his job in two; it will hire someone to run the hockey end of things and someone to run the business side.
Enter Jeff Truitt as director of hockey operations.
The board has yet to hire someone to run the business operation.
And what of head coach Dave Hunchak? Well, his future will be decided somewhere down the road. Only with a community-owned team would loose ends like the immediate future of the head coach be left untied in this situation, or so the theory goes.
Nothing, it seems, is ever simple with community-owned teams.
In Prince Albert, where the Raiders have seen their share of turmoil, GM/head coach Bruno Campese is in the middle of a restructuring.
And even in Swift Current, where the Broncos have improved their regular-season point total in each of Dean Chynoweth’s seasons as GM/head coach, there are questions. Why did the board choose only to exercise the 2009-10 option on Chynoweth’s contract and not give him an extension? How many conversations have board members had with Marc Habscheid?
As one Internet poster put it Monday: “There has (sic) been Habby to Swift Current rumors circulated in Swift every week for the past couple of years.”
The main reason there are a lot of people within the WHL who would like to see an end to community-owned operations comes down to decision-making and dollars.
The perception, real or imagined, is that the buck really doesn’t stop on anyone’s desk in a community-owned organization. At the same time, there is one person with each privately owned team whose money is on the line.
And when it comes time to make a decision, there always is one person with a privately owned team who calls the shots. Again, the perception with community-owned teams is that that isn’t the case.
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Just for the heck of it, I compiled a list of people who have served as general manager/director of hockey operations, head coach and/or assistant coach with community-owned teams since 2000. This is hardly an all-inclusive list, just one I was able to compile from information easily available to me.
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KAMLOOPS (went private during summer of 2007):
General manager/director of hockey operations: Mike Moore, Dean Clark (interim), Dean Clark.
Head coach: Dean Evason, Troy Mick, Dean Clark, Mark Ferner, Dean Clark.
Director of player personnel/head scout: Randy Hansch, Gord Loiselle.
Assistant coaches: Matt Recchi, Darcy Wakaluk (goaltenders), Craig Bonner, Mark Ferner, Bernie Pimm, Kirk McLean (goaltenders), Brian Henderson (goaltenders), Ryan Thorpe, Shane Zulyniak, Andrew Milne, Larry Robinson (goaltenders), Steve Gainey.
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MOOSE JAW:
General manager/director of hockey operations: Ralph Schmidt, Curtis Hunt, Lorne Molleken, Rick Dorman, Parry Shockey, Chad Lang, Jeff Truitt.
Head coach: Len Nielsen, Curtis Hunt, Parry Shockey, Steve Young, Rene Lemire (interim), Dave Hunchak.
Director of player personnel/head scout: Marv Merkel, Wade Klippenstein/Doug Molleken (co-head scouts), Wade Klippenstein, Rob MacLachlan.
Assistant coaches: Lane Lambert, Tim Cheveldae (goaltenders), Steve Young, Rene Lemire, Darren Evien, Kevin Higo.
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LETHBRIDGE:
General manager/director of hockey operations: Bryan Maxwell, Darren Stocker, Brd McEwan (interim), Roy Stasiuk, Herman Elfring (interim).
Head coach: Bryan Maxwell, Mikko Makela (interim), Mikko Makela, Luc Theoret (interim), Lindsay Hofford, Luc Theoret (interim), Michael Dyck.
Director of player personnel/head scout: Randy Maxwell, Brad McEwan, Brad Robson.
Assistant coaches: Michael Dyck, Mikko Makela, Luc Theoret, Jeff Battah (goaltenders), Jason Ruff, Matt Kabayama.
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PRINCE ALBERT:
General manager/director of hockey operations: Rick Valette, Donn Clark, Bruno Campese.
Head coaches: Kevin McClelland, Donn Clark, Wade Klippenstein, Neil Brady (interim), Peter Anholt, Bruno Campese.
Director of player personnel/head scout: Keith Wilson, Dave O'Brien.
Assistant coaches: Wade Klippenstein, Bryan Glynn, Drew Schoneck, Neil Brady, Dave Manson, Mark Odnokon, Artie Feher (goaltenders), Justin Cruse, Kris Knoblauch, Craig Bedard, Evan Lindsay (goaltenders), Steve Young.
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SWIFT CURRENT:
General manager/director of hockey operations: Todd McLellan, Brad McEwan, Dean Chynoweth.
Head coach: Todd McLellan, Brad McEwan, Randy Smith, Dean Chynoweth.
Director of player personnel/head scout: Jim Henderson, Jamie Porter.
Assistant coaches: Brad McEwan, Andrew Milne, Randy Smith, Bryan Glynn, Dave Hunchak, Dave McLennan (goaltenders), Kevin Swanson (goaltenders), Tim Kehler.
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Granted, there are privately owned teams that go through quite a few people, too, but the most successful operations – the Brandon Wheat Kings, Calgary Hitmen, Kelowna Rockets, Kootenay Ice, Spokane Chiefs, Tri-City Americans, Vancouver Giants – feast off stability.
It is that kind of stability that community-owned teams seem to find so evasive.
Lethbridge and Moose Jaw have made recent trips to the WHL championship final, the Hurricanes in 2008 and the Warriors in 2006.
The men who got them there have all gone away.