Chicago Sun-Times

EX-CUBS EXEC CULLEN DIES

Owned minor-league hockey, baseball, soccer teams

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VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — Blake Cullen, an executive for the Cubs and the National League who went on to own minor-league hockey, baseball and soccer teams, has died. He was 85.

Cullen died Monday at Sentara Virginia Beach General Hospital, Blackhawks senior vice president of hockey operations Al MacIsaac, a former player and assistant coach of Cullen’s Hampton Admirals hockey team, said Wednesday.

A graduate of Cornell with a degree in hotel management, Cullen worked for a Chicago hotel after college and was the Cubs’ traveling secretary from 1965 to 1975.

He moved to New York and became the NL’s administra­tor under league president Chub Feeney, serving as a key aide during rising labor turmoil that included a 50-day midseason strike in 1981. Cullen, testifying about team schedules, was the first witness at the 1985 Pittsburgh drug trials that implicated several players.

Cullen left the NL when Feeney retired and was replaced by A. Bartlett Giamatti in 1986. He spent a year as owner of the Daytona Beach Admirals, a White Sox affiliate in the Class A Florida State League.

In 1989, he founded the Hampton Admirals of the East Coast Hockey League, a team he sold after the 1995-96 season. From 1997 to ’98, he owned the Daytona Beach Speed Kings of the Eastern Indoor Soccer League.

Cullen had a stroke in 2011 and had been rehabilita­ting since as part of his recovery.

He is survived by a sister, Georgeanne Cullen. Burial is planned at the family plot in Newport, Rhode Island. A celebratio­n of his life will be planned at a later date.

 ?? SUN-TIMES ?? Blake Cullen (far right in suit) poses with the 1969 Cubs. Cullen served as the Cubs’ traveling secretary from 1965 to 1975.
SUN-TIMES Blake Cullen (far right in suit) poses with the 1969 Cubs. Cullen served as the Cubs’ traveling secretary from 1965 to 1975.

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