30 April 2009

Of course Ernie knows best in these situations

Ernie Salvatore, longtime Huntington sportswriter, on the Blizzard's management turmoil, 7 June 1995:
This really is what's at stake here. Credibility. Honesty. Honor. Whatever. The Huntington Blizzard franchise... has retrogressed badly in these areas the past two months. Getting them back, once the fighting stops, won't be easy.

29 April 2009

How much damage can a self-destructing management team do?


About 1500 fans/game worth. Season data is from the ECHL website; I've only gotten as far as season 3 (that big-ass drop on the graph) as far as game-to-game data.

26 April 2009

An amusing exchange

Lost in my (relatively) dormant stretch in the last year or so was an article in the Reading Eagle on the five worst teams in ECHL history. Who was #1?

1. 1993-94 Huntington Blizzard (14-49-5)

Pro hockey returned to hard-scrabble Huntington, W.Va., in 1993 after a 40-year absence. The Blizzard had numerous ups and downs in their seven seasons, but were never so low as that inaugural year.

They still hold the ECHL marks for most goals allowed, 6.07 per game and 413 total, and their 14 wins are tied with the aforementioned Roanoke Valley and Greenville teams for fewest ever.

The Blizzard were also on the short end of two of the three worst whippings in league annals, a 15-0 loss to Greensboro and a 16-3 loss at Nashville on Super Bowl Sunday in which goalie Jim Mill played all 60 minutes.

This team, which once gave up 67 shots in a game against South Carolina, also had a 16-game winless streak, a league-record 12-game home winless streak, is second-worst all-time with just 33 points and is tied for the third-worst winning percentage at .243.

The Blizzard had three coaches that year, including former NHL player Bob "Battleship" Kelly, who was fired after a 5-14-2 start. Defenseman Jared Bednar finished with a plus-minus rating of minus-82.

What gives the Blizzard the slight edge over the 2003-04 Grrrowl and the 1992-93 Rampage, however, was that they lost four of seven games to a horrid Louisville (16-44-8) team.

The Blizzard bounced back to make the playoffs the following season. They stuck around until 2000, and there's a small movement online to bring them back.
O RLY?

Howdy,

Found your article from December on the 5 worst teams in ECHL history--certainly can't argue with the findings. I'd also like to add that the '93-94 Blizzard's top scorer (or at least he was at that point) quit the team... in the middle of a game.

I was most curious, though, about the comment at the end about the "small movement online" to bring a team back; I have a webpage up on hockey in Huntington from some work I did in college at Marshall and was wondering if you knew more (or if in fact you just managed to stumble upon my humble webpage--huntingtonhockey.blogspot.com). If it's not a movement of me, myself, and the voices in my head, I'd like to get a hold of them...
His reply:

Yeah, I stumbled onto your blog and dubbed it a small movement. I guess the movement is even smaller than I realized!

In related news, I might put a guestbook up...

25 April 2009

Attendance recap: 1994-95

Average (regular season): 3747/game

Average including playoffs: 3677/game
--Huntington's two playoff games were on a Tuesday and Wednesday, which not surprisingly depressed attendance a bit

Monday games were surprisingly well-attended, averaging 4096/game; granted, one of these four games was the day after Christmas, while another was a special event for schoolkids (noon start, kids got a hockey game, a lecture on education from coach Paul Pickard, and a field trip for $4).

At this point Blizzard attendance had stabilized; there were only three games over 5000 fans in '94-95, yet their overall attendance inched slightly upward. Through 68 regular season games, the Blizzard's average attendance was 3743/game, which if they were competing in the ECHL today would only be about 500 off the league average, but then we're comparing the ECHL at its height (94-95 avg. 5315/game) to the ECHL in decline (4217/game). Still, things were looking promising by the end of that season....

23 April 2009

A preview of things to come

Been slowly getting that Blizzard attendance recap thingy knocked out, almost done with the Bob Henry era. One thing I've noticed--which is a little surprising--is that, at least through almost two seasons, if you plot a curve for the attendance data, it comes out more or less flat... I was expecting some decay. Of course I'm still in the Bob Henry era, but it's interesting seeing the relative stability of the fanbase at this point in time.

The Obama Method

Forgive me if I insert a political reference, but the title there is my quick-and-dirty name for getting a lot of money in small amounts out of a lot of people. In the context of this page, a similar endeavor was attempted to keep the old IHL Hornets in town, but I'm invoking it right now because Dayton Bombers owner Costa Papista is trying a similar approach in readying his franchise for a 2010 return:
Papista plans to[...] offer minority investors the opportunity to buy into the team at the $5,000 level through a private placement memorandum.
The plan calls for the team to secure 230 of these investors within 60 days, along with a new majority owner. The makeup of ownership would thus be 50.5% new guy, 10% Costa Papista, 39.5% everyone else--for those counting, that means that to feasibly run an ECHL franchise costs around $3 million. For comparison's sake, let's set the WABAC machine for 4 January 1957 (from the Raleigh Journal, courtesy of the always awesome NewspaperArchive.com):
Huntington Group Nears Hornets Purchase Price

HUNTINGTON (AP) - A local group headed by promoter Dick Deutsch today was within $10,820 of the reported $35,000 needed to buy the Huntington Hornets International Hockey League club from its present Fort Wayne, Ind. owners.

Deutsch announced after a public meeting last night that Huntington business and private individuals had pledged to purchase 2,418 shares at $10 a share in a proposed "Huntington Hornet Corp."

Deutsch holds an option to buy the club. He says he wants the people of Huntington to feel that it is their team. The option expires Monday.

Evansville, Ind., also has made overtures to purchase the club and move the franchise there. The club was moved here from Grand Rapids, Mich., only last year.
Per the US Government, that would amount to an IHL franchise costing shade over a quarter-million dollars in 2009 money. One of those shares would be $75; Papista is taking season-ticket deposits at $50. My, how things change...

20 April 2009

Help me internets!

I stumbled upon a Myspace page for "a group of individuals trying to bring a Professional Hockey Team to the City of Huntington WV."

One problem: the page has been deleted. I got that much from the Google-cache--I *just* missed these guys apparently.

So anyone out there stumbling upon this page, can you possibly help me out? I'm curious to know what happened...

16 April 2009

While I'm stalledish on one angle though...

...new motivation to dig a little more on the Tri-State Hockey League. Of everything I've looked up in the two and a half years of semi-sporadic research (my wife is telling me as I type this that I should write a book of all this!), this is the corner that excites me the most. As far as I can tell West Virginia was in fact the site of the first organized ice hockey played in the Southern US, when Charleston's Ice Sports rink opened in 1937 (beating Miami's Tropical Hockey League by a season). Had the TSAHL gotten off the ground, it would have been something of a proto-ECHL, straddling what were the territories of the Eastern Hockey League and the Michigan-Ontario League:
  • Huntington and Charleston, WV
  • Akron and Toledo, OH
  • plans for teams in Pittsburgh and Johnstown, PA, and Cleveland
Interestingly, on the territory note, the Toledo Babcocks were apparently in the MOHL while they were in the TSAHL; they were brought in when the proposed Pittsburgh entry failed to materialize, and Johnstown did in fact have a team the next season in the EHL, so talent-wise, I'm considering them to be essentially equal. Unfortunately, you'll notice that above I only list four teams that actually played, and two of them were a relatively close distance to each other--this ended up being the downfall of the league. Both Huntington and Charleston were on shaky ground, and were able to keep afloat because they were so close to each other, thus able to share costs for things like road trips. When Huntington's Iceland closed in February 1940, Charleston's Comets--barely able to keep going on their own, even with a fierce Huntington-Charleston rivalry--followed suit.

This much I know. What I'm curious about, though, is how they got from point A to B to C and so on...

Removed the ads from the page

Too much clutter. I'm gonna keep the little Feedjit widget though, just because I think it's neat.

CONSTRUCTIVE THINGS: well I've been moving, so I've been very constructive, but not necessarily on here (unsurprisingly). To those of you browsing on here, feel free to drop me a line if you've got a blank to fill in (or if you need a blank filled in) on the page :^)

09 April 2009

An aside or two

Anyone out there in the Tri-State blogging as well, a friend of mine named Dan Koksal is trying to set up a local bloggers' network. His email is koksal@marshall.edu if anyone out there's interested in joining up!

Also, I've decided that, as much as I enjoy the hell out of digging up new finds in the Cabell County Library's H-D archive, I should keep one foot in the present. To that end, how bout them Jackets? :^D

(also, JEEBUS those are pricey. However, Marshall students out there, the Rush CBJ program is still going--$15 upper level and $25 lower level. VERY LIMITED, only available on gameday, but I called a while back and they WILL accept college IDs other than OSU...)

07 April 2009

A few general notes

First off, you'll notice a couple new things, don't be alarmed. I've added ads on here, so apologies for the newfound clutter in the name of trying to gather an extra quarter here or there. I also have a little sidebar there that shows who comes here from where. This was something I noticed from a friend of mine who's taken to visualizing her Feedjit display on a map for her art exhibition; I thought "hey, this looks neat, I'll put it on my page".

While I'm working on my attendance geekery, props to perhaps the greatest attendance geek of them all, the one the only Hans Hornstein, who's been keeping track of hockey attendance for over a decade, including the last two seasons of Blizzard hockey.

One thing I'm going to look at with this is something originally done in an academic study in the Journal of Sports Management (yes, such a thing exists!), April 2006 edition, where they plotted out a curve determining how long it would take for attendance of a particular minor league baseball expansion team to drop to an unsustainable level (Those of you who can access it--I'm looking at you, Marshall students out there--can read the whole thing here.)! While such an analysis seems a tick pyrrhic, it could certainly be extrapolated into hockey.

Lastly, a news item that may interest quite a few--the SPHL is in Pensacola with an expansion proposal. Interesting bit is that--and as always feel free to correct me if I'm wrong--this seems to be the first time that an expansion effort has openly courted fan input.

06 April 2009

Professional practice in South Charleston?

Just a thought--after flipping through the Blizzard's first season, it's apparent that not having a permanent practice facility, while problematic, is not an impossible burden. They simply practiced everywhere else--sometimes at the Civic Arena, sometimes in Kentucky, sometimes staying extra on road trips. This gets me wondering--it may not be the most convenient situation, but suddenly the fact that the closest municipal ice facility is 45 minutes away isn't as bad as I thought it would be. After all--as evidenced in earlier discussions on here--plenty of people come from Huntington to play hockey there already.

05 April 2009

1993-94 attendance: 3740/game

High traffic days: Thursday-Saturday (3929, 4373, 4672 fans per game respectively)

7 games with over 5000 fans--six on Fri-Sun, one on Tuesday (the last game of the season)

Coolest find: the brawl at the end of that aforementioned last home game, in which a fan was ejected for spitting tobacco at a Nashville player. THAT's dedication... and lunacy, but there's a thin line between the two.

01 April 2009

Progress report on that attendance thing

Going one month at a time due to my terrible motion sickness while dealing with microfilm (even Dramamine doesn't help all that much), almost done with the Blizzard's first season. Interesting bits:

--Because of their unusual alignment their first season, they played Huntsville and Birmingham, AL more often than they played against in-state rivals Wheeling
--Of the teams they played more than once (so far), they drew 4263 avg. against Birmingham, 4193 against Louisville, and 3891 against Dayton
--As would be expected, weekend dates are more lucrative; through 26 home dates they averaged 4389 fans on 12 Friday/Saturday games, against only 3177 fans/game the rest of the week
--Four games drew over 5000 fans--two on Friday, two on Saturday. Five games drew less than half-capacity (<2800)--two on Sunday, two on Wednesday (the H-D devoted a couple articles to the idea that the Blizzard wouldn't do well on church days), and one on Tuesday

I should have the whole 1993-94 breakdown for you guys tomorrow.