Wednesday 25 April 2012

StingBlaze are no more; New dawn on the horizon?

The Hull Stingrays will enter the 12/13 Elite Ice Hockey League campaign with their third set of owners in nine seasons after it was tonight revealed that their current Coventry based ownership group have pulled out of the city ahead of next season.

16 days after joint owner Andy Buxton promised the club's future ownership would become 'clearer' within seven days, a 1040 word statement was tonight released confirming their decision to leave Hull two years after saving the club, with the release also explaining the reasons for the lengthy delay and lack of communication since.

Accepting that, though their commitment to the club's future was unwavering throughout their two years in charge, the 'continued growth of the Stingrays was dependent upon local ownership and operational control', the statement also officially confirmed that discussions have been ongoing with potential new owners since the end of the 11/12 EIHL campaign, something openly discussed in the media.

The owners singled out that the reason for the delay was down to interested parties expressed their interest in ice-time directly to Hull City Council (HCC), who own the Hull Arena. This then forced the council to put the ice-time contract, yet to be agreed for the 12/13 campaign, up for tender for potential Stingrays owners.

Though the current owners confirmed they will not compete for the ice-time tender - although they will be in attendance at the meeting on Friday - they did also state that any new bidder will have to pay an upfront cost, one way or another, for the right to return the Stingrays to the EIHL next season.

It has become clear through the press release that there remain two stages and then two options open to any bidders - including the heavily favoured joint bid of local businessman Nic Gough and last season's bench coach Bobby McEwan.

First, any potential owner must win the tender with HCC for ice-time at the Hull Arena next season before either setting up the club afresh by paying EIHL a fee as 'new operator' or by buying the existing club from the current owners.

Although there are other bids mentioned, Gough and McEwan, inparticular, have so far refused to meet the current owners valuation of the club - which would include equipment, cars, storage facilities, a mascots costume and intellectual property rights, which is presumably the club's name and logo amongst other things.

The valuation placed on the club according to the statement is 'a long way' from the £40k figure quoted in a recent Hull Daily Mail article and also way below the cost of the 'new operator' cost imposed by the EIHL. Either way they must agree with the fee requested by the current owners or pay the fee requested by the EIHL.

Despite this, the bid of Gough and McEwan seems likely to be the club's future with the statement reading:
"We would like to make it clear that we are very supportive of their [Gough and McEwan's] desire to become the new Stingrays operators. We believe that they have the interests of the Stingrays at heart and will continue to operate the team in the Elite League. They are well connected in the local area and have the ability to take the Stingrays further forward."
Nevertheless, whoever it is that decides to take the club on and how ever they do it, they will have to move quickly and decisively - starting on Friday at the meeting with Hull City Council. A failure to secure the ice-time contract by allowing it to fall into a rival bidders hands or failing to agree terms could be both costly and time consuming.

With the current owners now walking away from the club, the ice-time contract would potentially be the first stage in a new era of ice hockey in the city, setting the club up for it's third owners in nine years.

The statement closed by stating:
"With our involvement in the Hull Stingrays coming to an end, we would like to take the chance to thank the supporter, sponsors, helpers, players and coaching staff for everything they have contributed during the last two years. It has been very challengeing operating two clubs and there have undoubtedly been ups and downs along the way. What we have done is keep the sport alive at the top level in Hull for two seasons at a time when that looked to be virtually impossible and we would particularly like to thank the players for their contributions to this."
Poignantly it ended with:
"Hull now has a club that  people want to take forward which is a real positive for the sport."
In response to that and on a final note, it is true the current ownership have taken a lot of stick during the two years they have run top flight ice hockey in the city - some deserved, some harsh - but they undoubtedly deserve great credit and a massive thank you for saving the club from the abyss, keeping the dream alive and leaving the club in a much, much better state than they inherited it.

A tremendous amount of hard work - from all of the players, staff and volunteers - has gone into improving the club to a point where it is in as good a condition as it ever has been, both on and off the ice, so despite the criticisms - be it lack of communication to fans or alleged late payments to players - the current owners (now previous?) deserve huge credit, if not for improving the club, then for saving it!

Saturday 21 April 2012

Cloutier brothers to bid for Stingrays?

The battle to become the Excel Hull Stingrays third ownership group in nine years took an unexpected turn yesterday following a cryptic tweet from three-year player/coach Sylvain Cloutier.

Details of negotiations between a number of parties looking to takeover the Elite Ice Hockey League club from current Coventry based owners for the 12/13 season - their ninth in existence and seventh in the British top flight - have largely been kept behind closed doors.

Last week, it was believed at least three separate parties were interested in the club with confirmed bids from last season's assistant coach Bobby McEwan and local businessman Paul Fielder as well as a mooted bid from former player Slava Koulikov, while a rumoured bid from agent Ben Milhench was refuted.

Indeed, aside from McEwan and Fielder making their intentions known in the media through the Hull Daily Mail, any details of the negotiations and potential bidders have been sketchy with the current owners silent as they review the best course of action.

Last night, it appeared that three bidders may soon become four as Cloutier took to Twitter to write, "should my brother and I do it or not do it, that is the question".


Though that is as specific as the message got, many immediately interpreted that suggestive message to mean Sylvain and younger brother, and former NHLer, Dan Cloutier were looking at making a bid for the club. As quickly as the message was read and understood, the Rays fans threw their full support behind the Canadian's bid - unsurprising since he guided the club with his blend of passion and determination to three consecutive record years on-ice.

He and Dan were rumoured to be at the heart of a potential takeover earlier in the month only for this to be denied by Sylvain during a Stingrays Fans Forum live on West Hull Community Radio (WHCR) prior to the Stingrays EIHL Playoff Semi-Final defeat to Nottingham.

According to Hockey Zone Plus 35 year old Dan Cloutier earned $12,075,000 during a ten year NHL career that saw him ice in more than 300 NHL games with the likes of New York Rangers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Vancouver Canucks and LA Kings, and so he, it is believed, would hold more than enough financial clout to back his brother in a joint ownership of the Rays.


More recently he has been involved in coaching as goaltending coach of the Barrie Colts in the Ontario Hockey League, while he was also part of a mooted bid for an unnamed junior hockey team in Canada that initially saw Sylvain deny their interest in taking over in Hull.

Though the rumoured bid is flaky at best, his tweet has already received backing from player Tristan Harper, Coventry Blaze coach Luc Chabot and agent David Imonti - who have added credibility and credence to the speculation that the tweet was regarding the Stingrays by weighing in to encouraging the Canadian to do the deed - whatever that may be.

Of course, despite universal and unequivocal support from the Rays fanbase and beyond, there would be no guarantee that any bid - should it materialise - would be accepted by the current Coventry based ownership  - who have already stated they may yet remain for a third season in Hull as unlikely and possibly unpopular as that may be.

The seven to ten day time frame which club director Andy Buxton promised would make the club's future "clearer" has now been and gone, and with every day that passes goes another crucial day of preparation for any new owner or coach ahead of the 12/13 campaign.

The clock is ticking, though it appears it may be only a matter of time before the Stingrays are on to their third set of owners - at least if the fans have anything to do with it.

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Stingrays enter crucial period off-ice after on-ice success

The Excel Hull Stingrays have entered a crucial period in their short history, just days after making their historic first ever appearance at the Elite Ice Hockey League's Finals Weekend in a Playoff Semi-Final against the Nottingham Panthers at the Capital FM Arena.

Prior to a bittersweet playoff campaign, which saw the Stingrays beat the Sheffield Steelers over two legs before capitulating 10-3 to the Panthers during their first ever EIHL semi-final appearance, the club's ownership group - consisting of Coventry Blaze owners Andy Buxton, Mike Cowley, Paul Thompson and James Pease - confirmed that they were in a number of discussions regarding the future of the Stingrays - including possibly offloading the club to new owners.

A tough year financially in Coventry has forced the group to re-focus their priorities ahead of next season and, having saved the Stingrays from going out of business two years ago for the good of both themselves and the league as a whole, they are understandably looking at all their options heading into next season.

Having stated their intention to turn the Stingrays into a viable, self-sustaining business from the outset, they have made great strides in increasing attendances and sponsorship, and are allegedly just four figures from breaking even. Though that four figure break even number is a rough figure and could settle anywhere between £1,000 and £9,999 in the red, that in itself is an achievement considering prior to the 10/11 season it stood at £150,000 before previous owners Mike and Sue Pack withdrew from the club.

Thanks to their healthy relationship with former Coventry captain and Stingrays player-coach Sylvain Cloutier that intent has translated into two record breaking season's on-ice in which the Rays first finished seventh, setting a record points total in 10/11, before again finishing seventh this season, also making the end of season Final Four weekend for the first ever time.

The positives and value they have added to the club since taking over from the Pack's is there for all to see, although that is not to diminish the incredible job the Packs did in their seven years, after starting the club from nothing following the collapse of the Hull Thunder.

Nevertheless, there have been some vocal critics of the current ownership group with a lack of communication with fans something frequently brought up, though it does have to be said this is often a bug-bear of sporting fans in general, in a modern age where information, speculation and rumour is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Unsurprisingly, their fans in Coventry have also criticised the arrangement, pointing out that the Blaze were allegedly in serious trouble financially this season, something not helped by the split of their investment in time and resources between the two clubs.

With the club on something of a high and feeling amongst fans incredibly positive after the team's against-all-odds EIHL Playoff Quarter Final victory over Yorkshire rivals Sheffield and EIHL Semi-Final, despite the heavy defeat to Nottingham, it looks as though now is as good a time as any to part-ways with the Stingrays and offload them to a willing suitor.

Much to the surprise of many in the British game, Buxton reiterated on Monday that there are "a lot of options" being considered and, therefore, a lot of options available.

Two would-be owners have already publicly stated that they have made bids for the club. First to confirm his bid was Stingrays bench and assistant coach to Sylvain Cloutier, Bobby McEwan. The Scot - who has lived in the city for the last two decades - revealed he had made a bid for the club prior to last weekend.

Perhaps more surprising than the fact there are a number of potential suitors looking to take over the club is that the current owners are apparently looking for something in return for giving up the club - potentially a cash sum. McEwan revealed to the Hull Daily Mail, "the current owners have made it known they were willing to step away and negotiations have been ongoing for a few weeks. I've made an offer, but obviously they are looking to sell it for as much as they can."

Though the price of the club is unknown, and will likely remain that way, it wouldn't be surprising at all were Buxton and co. looking for the previously mentioned break even, four figure sum to wipe out their losses and leave the city as they arrived.

Rumours of bids from player-agent Ben Milhench and former player Slava Koulikov and Dan Cloutier - former NHLer and brother of Stingrays coach Sylvain - have generally been discredited but may still be involved in potential bids.

Though further speculation suggests Hull City owners Assem and Ehab Allam - who attended a game against Coventry earlier in the year and have already donated a five figure sum to the Hull Stingrays Community Foundation - are also interested - having invested money in the all major sporting sides in Hull in the last year and a half.

However, today local businessman and ice hockey fan Paul Fielder revealed that he too is interested in taking over becoming the second man to announce his interest, he said:
"They know I'm interested, but in anything like this it's a business decision and the current owners have a product to sell. It's a case of waiting to see whether they are interested in taking the matter any further"
According to the Hull Daily Mail, Fielder recently sold previous company Lime Property - through whom he had first become involved with the club after previous owners the Packs spoke to him regarding players accommodation, while he has also sponsored both Hull KR and Hull FC.

Still, despite the offers, it isn't beyond the realms of possibility that, once everything is evaluated, the current Coventry based ownership remains in place, should they not receive a satisfactory offer. As unlikely as it seems, it would make more sense financially to remain in place than letting an unprepared new owner take control and seriously struggle financially, something the EIHL has seen far too often during it's nine years.

So far without a coach or any players for the 2012/2013 EIHL campaign - which begins in September - one thing is for sure, the club has already fallen behind the position they were in at this point last season, when they had player-coach Cloutier and topscorer Jereme Tendler signed up, and Brits Dan Scott, Jack Watkins, Tristan Harper and Sam McCluskey set to be announced.

Likewise, at this point in the off-season they have also fallen behind other Elite League club's - most of whom have re-signed coaches and players. Traditionally, the end of the playoffs signals the beginning of the off-season and, as a result, players will begin looking for new club's and coaches for new players, something the Stingrays will be unable to do in their current uncertain position.

It seems highly likely that key Stingray imports Jason Silverthorn - who notched a career year this season - Jereme Tendler and Christian Boucher will be highly valued both in the UK and abroad, while coach Cloutier has already revealed he has turned down a job offer with a French speaking side. The market for British players such as Sam McCluskey, Dan Scott, Tristan Harper, Andy McKinney and even rookie revelation Bobby Chamberlain is always a hot one and will be more so now, given these players now have a year of Elite League experience under their belts

These players can't and won't wait forever, and as such it is crucial the current negotiation phase of the potential ownership change occurs as swiftly and cleanly as possible, so as to allow the Stingrays the best possible chance of improving for a fifth successive season, hopefully under Cloutier but perhaps not, during 12/13.

More important than that, however, is that the club's next owners - potentially their third in nine season's - are financially sound and able to help the Stingrays continue their upward trend both on and off-ice.

Sunday 8 April 2012

Goodnight 11/12

It's been a long, rollercoaster of a season that ultimately ended in the Rays losing 10-3 against Nottingham in a historic first ever Elite Ice Hockey League Semi-Final - having finished seventh and beaten 7-4 Sheffield over two legs in the Quarter Finals.

Here's a quick photo montage looking back at the Stingrays 11/12 Elite Ice Hockey League campaign using Arthur Foster's brilliant photos:


Sorry FBB's coverage has been non-existent in 2012, other than on Twitter, I'm hoping to restore it to it's previous consistently updated glory this summer as it promises to be an eventful one off-ice!

Anyway, thank you players and fellow fans for yet another memorable year, lets do it all again next year!

See you in 2012/2013!