Cape Breton Post

Embracing the past

Under new owner, Hurricanes welcoming Hartford Whalers history

- BY JOEDY MCCREARY

The new owner of the Carolina Hurricanes has a soft spot for his team’s old identity - the Hartford Whalers.

In the month since Tom Dundon assumed control of the Hurricanes, they’ve brought back the old “Brass Bonanza” fight song, stocked the shelves in the team store with that beloved whale-tail logo and have discussed bringing back the Whalers, too - if only for a future turn-back-the-clock night.

Under his leadership, the Hurricanes have done a 180-degree turn in the way they view, market and appreciate their past.

“It’s ours, right? I mean, it’s who we were. It’s part of the history,” Dundon said in an interview with The Associated Press. “To me, it makes a lot of sense. ... This was too easy. ‘How could I not?’ was probably the better question.”

In the month since Dundon bought a majority share of the team from longtime owner Peter Karmanos Jr., the 46-yearold Dallas businessma­n has made several changes - most visibly, the embracing of who the Hurricanes were before they became the Hurricanes.

That’s a drastic shift from their approach under Karmanos. He purchased the Whalers in 1994 and moved the franchise to North Carolina three years later, never looking back after seven consecutiv­e losing seasons in Connecticu­t and complaints about attendance at what was then known as the Hartford Civic Center. That’s not the case anymore. The Hurricanes are selling Whalers T-shirts and jerseys with that distinctiv­e “H” formed in the empty space between a “W” and a whale tail - in their team store. They occasional­ly play “Brass Bonanza” during stops in play. And Dundon says he’s working with the league on a plan to “wear the uniform and sort of make it part of what we do” as part of a nostalgia night.

“I think it’s really good-looking stuff, so for me it was like, this is great gear, and this is where we’ve come from, and you know, I think it’s fun,” Dundon said. “And so for me, this is supposed to be fun, it’s entertainm­ent, and we’re supposed to care about the team, and you see something like that that looks good and creates something to talk about and something to enjoy.”

Not surprising­ly, the Whalers’ identity has long had a strong sentimenta­l attraction throughout the hockey world especially in their former home.

The state of Connecticu­t is selling Whalers license plates for $60 to help fund new facilities at a children’s hospital. And just last week, Gov. Dan Malloy issued an open letter to Dundon to invite the Hurricanes back to the Hartford area for an outdoor game at Rentschler Field, the UConn football team’s home field, or to play a regularsea­son game at their former home rink.

Wrote Malloy: “In short, the Whalers’ spirit is alive and well in Hartford.”

In North Carolina, though, Dundon’s arrival and subsequent appreciati­on for the team’s green-and-blue past has brought some buzz back to a team that is making a push for just its second playoff appearance since winning the Stanley Cup in 2006. He also has quashed those pesky, persistent relocation rumours that have plagued the franchise for years.

Dundon says his fans-first ownership style was influenced by a pair of Dallas-based team owners - Mark Cuban of the NBA’s Mavericks, and Jerry Jones of the NFL’s Cowboys. He “had a front-row seat to everything they did” as the Mavericks transforme­d from cellar-dweller to NBA champion.

 ?? CHRIS SEWARD/THE NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP ?? Kurt Cusac, a worker at The Eye store, straighten­s out Hartford Whalers T-shirts before the doors opened before an NHL game played between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Feb. 1, 2018. It’s the first...
CHRIS SEWARD/THE NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP Kurt Cusac, a worker at The Eye store, straighten­s out Hartford Whalers T-shirts before the doors opened before an NHL game played between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Feb. 1, 2018. It’s the first...

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