Pass the Puck Gary Bettman
Monday, December 19, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Friday, March 11, 2011
Don Newman's Take on Gary Bettman's failings.
By Don Newman, special to CBC News
See Don's Complete editoral here.Discredited strategy
Harper's dilemma is a bit like that of NHL commissioner Gary Bettman's: caught out by past maneouvrings.
Lured away from the NBA where he was a deputy commissioner, Bettman's game plan was to get the NHL onto a major American television network.
The initial strategy was to shift teams from smaller Canadian cities to American ones where there were already established TV markets for professional teams in other sports.
Clustering pro teams in this manner was meant to help the NHL gain U.S. exposure. But it hasn't worked.
Now, apparently, Bettman looks prepared to again try the discredited strategy the NHL attempted in its first American expansion phase in the 1970s — violence.
Put the morality aside for a moment, is this even smart business?
You would think that cheap shots to the head would be outlawed after the one that put Sydney Crosby, the league's marquee attraction, out of action for over two months.
How good for business is that? How good for hockey?
And how good for public life is the kind of partisanship that has led to charges in the courts and the prospect of a sitting government, for the first time ever, being found in contempt of Parliament.
Of these two great Canadian institutions under attack, the NHL seems to be sleepwalking into a perilous future.
The one less followed, our parliamentary democracy, at least holds out the possibility of correction.
Conflicts and Corruption. Shame on you NHL!
Bettman had his contract quietly extended five more years back in November, The Globe and Mail reported Friday. The newspaper reports that the nine-member executive committee unanimously approved the extension.
Bettman's current contract, which pays him $7.2 million annually, was originally set to expire this summer. Apparenlty, one of his biggest backers may very well be the owner of the team at the center of this week's controversy.
What will surely fire up the conspiracy theorists, who have been venting loudly on all forms of media following Zdeno Chara’s hit on Max Pacioretty of the Montreal Canadiens, is the identity of the driving force behind Bettman’s new contract. It is Jeremy Jacobs, the NHL’s chairman of the board of governors who just happens to own the Boston Bruins, the team that employs Chara. However, as chairman, one of Jacobs’s duties is to keep the commissioner and the other key executives of the NHL under contract.