Edmonton Journal

SENS DESTINED FOR DUMPSTER?

Downtown arena ‘vital’ to team’s future all but dead on heels of Melnyk lawsuit

- SCOTT STINSON Toronto sstinson@postmedia.com

When the Ottawa Senators released their impossibly awkward hype video in September, the one in which owner Eugene Melnyk described his team as kind of in the dumpster, there was a moment, other than that one, that stood out.

Melnyk tells defenceman Mark Borowiecki — who is ostensibly his interviewe­r but in practice is a sounding board — that people have wondered about the future of the team in Ottawa.

“The franchise isn’t going anywhere,” Melnyk says. “That’s, like, totally solid.”

It turns out that, as these assurances were being uttered, the deal for a new downtown arena for the Senators was already in a complete shambles. That would be the same arena, as part of the redevelopm­ent of the LeBreton lands next to the Ottawa River, that NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said was “vital” to the future of the team.

The LeBreton deal isn’t technicall­y dead, but all that’s left is to shovel soil over the corpse. When one partner sues another for $700 million, as Melnyk has done to developer John Ruddy, that’s pretty much the end of that.

And so, while Melnyk continues to insist that he has every intention of keeping his team in Ottawa and pursuing a downtown arena, Senators fans could be forgiven for wondering if this is the beginning of the end. Arenas are notoriousl­y difficult to finance and build, for the simple reason that the economic case for them, to use Melnyk’s phrase, is kind of in the dumpster. You need a few hundred million dollars and in the end you have a building that will be booked for 41 nights a year, plus some exhibition games, and as many concerts as you can schedule.

(Gary) Bettman supported the move downtown as key to reversing years of declining attendance, a credible plan to do it was proceeding, and now this.

People spend money on this stuff, but it’s the same discretion­ary money they would have spent anyway in the local economy, so the net gain is minimal, in terms of return on investment in the building.

Sometimes government­s will throw all that aside in hopes of luring a sports team with a shiny new arena (hello, Quebec City), but that it obviously not part of the business case here. The Sens are already in Ottawa. Well, Ottawa-ish.

The trick, as wealthy sports owners have figured out, is to make the new-arena play part of a neighbourh­ood revitaliza­tion or some such sales pitch, with the building folded into larger plans that include other commercial and retail developmen­ts and maybe a casino (hello, Edmonton). That way the fact that the billionair­e owner is getting a sweetheart deal on the arena is lost in the glare of the Fabulous Economic Developmen­t Opportunit­y.

It’s not easy to get those pieces into place, but LeBreton Flats presented just such a case: an under-used piece of prime land that’s ripe for a splashy developmen­t. The financial details of the prospectiv­e deal had not yet been released, and it’s entirely possible that Melnyk was displeased by the way they were going.

He says he no longer believes in the viability of the project because of competitio­n from an adjoining developmen­t owned by Ruddy, but it could also be that he was simply unhappy with the amount of his own money that he would have had to kick in to the LeBreton proposal. One unnamed source told Postmedia colleague Jon Willing last week that the Senators owner’s expectatio­ns in negotiatio­ns were “spectacula­rly unrealisti­c.”

But with that deal staggering to its demise, what next? Melnyk has already said that he has no interest in being a tenant in someone else’s downtown arena, should LeBreton end up in the hands of a different group entirely. There’s no guarantee that the next plan for the area would even include an NHL-size arena, given how this one imploded.

Asked what the National Capital Commission — which last week gave Melnyk and Ruddy until January to sort their issues out, before the lawsuit blew up that idea — would do about LeBreton next, a spokesman said they’ll deal with that when the board next meets, in the new year. He also provided a quote from Marc Seaman, the chairman of the NCC board, saying it was “fully committed to the redevelopm­ent of LeBreton Flats to the highest standards of design, accessibil­ity, sustainabi­lity and connectivi­ty.”

You will note that, among those standards, there is nothing certain about a hockey arena.

The NHL, which has so far stayed silent on the LeBreton imbroglio, cannot be pleased. Bettman supported the move downtown as key to reversing years of declining attendance, a credible plan to do it was proceeding, and now this.

Will the team try to stick it out in Kanata? That location, aside from getting worse as traffic has increased, has been poisoned by all the talk of moving downtown. You can tell people that relocation is crucial only so often before it sinks in that your current location stinks.

Melnyk says he’s game to try again. He told my colleague Adrian Humphreys in an interview last week that “the Senators remain committed to the hope of developing a downtown arena and will continue to explore options to make that happen.”

But, where, and with whom? There isn’t another parcel of empty land handy, unless the Senators are going to put another rink on the lawn of Parliament Hill. And Melnyk’s reputation locally, especially after this latest controvers­y is, well, kind of in the dumpster.

The team’s fans may see this as the chance to finally get Melnyk out of the picture, if he doesn’t want to be in Kanata and no one wants to help him pay for a new arena. But he owns the team. Changing that is even harder than building a new stadium.

 ?? WAYNE CUDDINGTON ?? A new downtown rink for the NHL’s Ottawa Senators was part of the proposed LeBreton Flats developmen­t that’s now in shambles.
WAYNE CUDDINGTON A new downtown rink for the NHL’s Ottawa Senators was part of the proposed LeBreton Flats developmen­t that’s now in shambles.
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