Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Katz oblivious to potential for fans' outrage
Oilers owner apologizes for gaffe
EDMONTON -- The owner of the Edmonton Oilers says he never realized that threatening to move his NHL team to Seattle would trigger a firestorm of fan anger against him in the Alberta capital.
"There was probably a little too much (bare-knuckled Mark) Messier and not enough (graceful Wayne) Gretzky in the way that we conveyed things," Darryl Katz said Monday in a radio interview.
"What we didn't consider was how our supporters or our fans would feel and that was wrong and I apologize for it."
Katz, speaking in an interview with a team employee, was following up a full-page ad he took out in local newspapers Saturday apologizing for the Seattle gambit.
The Seattle gambit had brought a deluge of angry, personal, and even vulgar comments against Katz on social media and in letters to the editor.
In the weekend ad, Katz promised in future to be more open on what the Oilers want in the proposed new $475-million cost-shared downtown arena.
"In hindsight, I have underestimated the degree to which it would be up to us to make the case for public funding," he said in the ad.
"Public communications is not in my nature. Chalk that up as a personal shortcoming."
City councillors and Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel called the apology a good first step, but said Katz still must make his case in public why the team feels the deal it made with the city a year ago needs to be changed to deliver millions of dollars more in public subsidies per year to the Oilers.
Two days later, that hasn't happened.
Katz told the radio show more information has been delivered, but behind closed doors.
Mandel has set a deadline of Oct. 17 for a deal to be worked out on a rink that on paper will cost $475 million, but, when land costs, loan payments and surrounding amenities are paid for, will come in over $700 million.
Under the deal, taxpayers and ticket buyers would fund the rink and the Oilers would pay $5.5 million a year in lease payments for three decades.
In return, the Oilers would run the arena, pay for its upkeep (estimated at $10 million a year), and keep all revenues from Oiler games, trade shows, concerts, and other events for 11 months out of the year. Concession sales alone are estimated at $20 million a year.
The team would also get naming rights for the rink (valued between $1 million and $3 million a year) and $20 million from the city over 10 years for unspecified advertising.
Construction was to start early in 2013 and be completed by the fall of 2015.
-- The Canadian Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition October 2, 2012 D2
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