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Your new source for everything Freedom is right here. There will be a new post waiting for you Saturday morning with updates from co-owner Mark Chappuis.
Be sure to bookmark the new site and register to post comments.
November 21, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Owners for the Continental Indoor Football League will gather Sept. 27 in Canton, Ohio, for an "informal" league meeting, league co-founder Jeff Spitaleri said.
Spitaleri expects Fort Wayne to be represented at the meeting and said he fully intends for the city to have a team in the league in 2009.
He's just not sure which other cities will have teams.
Spitaleri said Saginaw and Muskegon still have contracts with the CIFL. Those teams have been "extended offers" to join the Indoor Football League, according to a statement from that league. So it's hard to say what will happen with those teams. Saginaw is the defending champion.
For now, Spitaleri said the league could have 10-12 teams in 2009. Part of next weekend will be spent discussing expansion possibilities, among other things.
"We're going to present the structural changes we're making with the league," Spitaleri said. "We're also going to be collecting our arena dates, setting some deadlines for some things to take us through the next few months and into the next owners' meeting (in January)."
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
September 19, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (112) | TrackBack (0)
Just got off the phone with Freedom co-owner Bill Fahlsing, and he said he and Mark Chappuis continue to work to get the team on the field in 2009.
"I feel very confident that what we did was what people would have liked to have seen: We were able to get through the year and go on," Fahlsing said. "But we also want to make sure we take the right steps. If you make a mistake or an err in judgment, something you say and it doesn't come 100 percent true, you get into trouble."
In other words, don't expect any grand pronouncements for at least a couple weeks.
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
August 21, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (14) | TrackBack (0)
... here's a fresh post for you to comment in. Perhaps I'll update again in Another 48 Hours or so.
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
August 01, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (59) | TrackBack (0)
Ron Wise explained it simply enough.
"I'm football nut," he said in early June when chatting for a story on the health of indoor football in Fort Wayne.
Wise played at Snider before heading to Anderson College to play for current Saint Francis coach Kevin Donley. He was on Donley's staff at Georgetown College (Ky.). He currently is an assistant coach for Homestead.
But perhaps the truest measure of his passion for the game: he bought season tickets for the Fort Wayne Safari, the city's first sniff at indoor football that ultimately never even played a game.
There are plenty of others in the community who have supported the sport from the beginning.
Dan Wolf, who owns Wolf's Color Graphics, has had season tickets every year. He started with eight and has 12 for the past four years, he said. He often makes road trips, too.
Tom Rodenbeck had as many as 24 season tickets until this season.
Angie Vance and Ernie Gresh also are consistent presences at home games.
With the season wrapped up, now they're back in a familiar place: playing the waiting game.
"I guess you just become numb to it," Wolf said. "You sit back in your recliner and wait for the phone to ring, see who has what kind of news. I'm not really worried about it at all. Whatever is going to happen is going to happen. What I hope happens is they get the needed investors or find the correct owners to fund this thing long-term."
Other fans, like Troy Dan, think maybe the next best course of action is to have indoor football disappear for a year or two.
"There needs to be a hunger developed," Dan said. "It's like relationships. The city has been dating a football team now. They're on their third football team in three years. They're tired of dating. Let them get hungry for a relationship again. Let them yearn for something. This community is just tired."
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
June 22, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (171) | TrackBack (0)
Mark Chappuis comes from a football family.
His dad, Bob, helped Michigan win the Rose Bowl in 1948 and was runner-up for the Heisman Trophy in 1947. Mark Chappuis also has a brother who played collegiately, and Mark was a starting linebacker at Butler in the mid-1970s.
So when Mark Chappuis says he doesn't want to get rich off indoor football, that he really wants to see it succeed because he thinks it fits in the community, one would be hard-pressed not to believe him.
Maybe that's what makes him a perfect partner for Bill Fahlsing, who is such a staple in the sports community, he's been attending Komets games since the late 1950s.
When we spoke in early June for our package on whether indoor football can work in Fort Wayne, Chappuis and Fahlsing said they had no doubts the franchise could return to drawing 6,000-plus fans per game.
"Because, at least on paper, it worked very well about three years ago with big crowds," Chappuis said. "We just think with the proper management, it should work well, and the proper promotional effort."
Perhaps the biggest hurdle in the Freedom's return in 2009 -- though Chappuis doesn't doubt it will be back -- is finding investors who are willing to spend and help absorb the team's debt.
Just how deep the team is in the hole hasn't been confirmed, largely because new debt is surfacing weekly, Chappuis said.
But whatever the number, it's enough to scare off some potential investors.
Ron Wise is part of group of about 12 local businessmen who are interested in owning an indoor franchise in the city. Wise said the group "offered to take (the Freedom) over, but we're not going to pay their debt and their expenses."
Chappuis and co-owner Bill Fahlsing said they haven't received any "formal" offers to buy the team.
But they do need financial help.
"We need help for what I call the emotional football Fort Wayne native, people who have the wherewithal to support something that returns a value to them, either personally or to their business or their family or the community," Fahlsing said. "There's many people like that. ... Any time you go the general public and say 'We need your support and that's all we need,' it's somewhat unfounded support and it's not long-lasting. What we need to say is 'We will do what we can to increase the value.' If we average 2,600, we think we should 4,200 to 4,800 next year and maybe more, especially based on if the offseason is favorable and our product is good to begin the season. It'll snowball."
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
June 21, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
The Continental Indoor Football League technically is in its second season, but the league founded by brothers Jeff and Eric Spitaleri worked under a different name in Year 1. In three years as a league co-founder, Jeff Spitaleri has reviewed countless proposals for ownership groups, and he admitted the league has made mistakes in adding some franchises.
Here's more from Jeff Spitaleri, who spoke to me for the package on what it will take for indoor football to succeed.
What do you think are the keys to having a successful franchise?
The first key to being successful is not coming in expecting to make money right away because you're not going to do it. That's one of the things when we talk to people (who want a team). If those are the first words out of their mouth ... that's a red flag for us. The first thing really is just to understand it's a process to get to making money. After that, you understand that there is work that has to be done. People aren't just going to come to your game because you're in town. A competitive team does help, but all the other stuff is very important.
When you look at a certain ownership structure, is there one that works?
Every market is different. We made the mistake on this a few times over, but local ownership is very, very important. Obviously, we've seen the difference between a local owner and one that's not local and how that goes down. I've seen it. More and more, it comes back to who is from there understands the market and understands what needs to be done and the mentality of the people they're going to be dealing with.
What's the process when someone wants to join the league?
If they're brand-new, if they're somebody we've never met before, the first thing we want to know is background on them. Who are you? What makes you decide to get a team? Some of the people I've talked to have no business calling but just think they can call up and get a team, and that's not the case. The process really is just they call us, we get some background on them, like a phone interview. Then we've got some paperwork we send to them to fill out in regards to their market, their background, their finances. I know there are some other leagues that have like a $5,000 application fee. We don't have anything like that. Whether I have a check for $5,000 in my hand or not, I can look at it and decide, 'This person is capable of handling this team or they're not.' We base it off of that. If we turn them down, which we've done plenty of times, we tell them they're not qualified at this time. If we accept them, we tell them here's what's due.
So tell me about the situation here. Todd Ellis comes in and shows you financial statements, obviously, and you felt he was good to go. Then you kind of backtracked on that a bit, kicking him out and then re-instating him. How do you avoid that from happening again?
There were some things we may have to get into that are a little bit deeper than just reviewing paperwork. We might have to go the route of the full-blown checks, verification checks, financial checks. Anybody can put their finance report in front of you, and here's how much they're worth. But there's got to be better ways of confirming they're true.
And you're looking into those?
We've made some mistakes. I admit that. We're not perfect by any means. We learn new things every single day. ... A lot of people probably look at it and say 'it's not hard to do a background check.' I could give you a bank reference and give you a number and tell them you're calling, and all they've got to do is answer the phone such-and-such bank, active, valid and done. We'll get it. We'll figure it out. But for the time being, I know it's hard to trust people you don't know, but sometimes we have to stick to just that and taking people at their word and hoping the information they've given to us is accurate and correct. Obviously, there's cases when it doesn't happen.
Do you anticipate having a franchise in Fort Wayne next season?
I would hope so, yeah. I really feel that given the opportunity, it can be the type of market it was before, and the fans would enjoy the game.
What's Fort Wayne's status with the league right now?
It's a three-year agreement with the league. What we'd do if there were going to be new owners that would come on board, we'd want to talk to them and then go from there. Then we'd say 'yes' or 'no.' After that, we'll renew. We want to stay away from year-to-year because we want them to build something. ... We're not looking to have a new team come in and pay a new expansion fee. We want the stability factor. ... We're hoping if a new group does come in, they're not looking to play in another league. This is a pretty good fit. I hope they sit down and look and see that.
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
June 20, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Matt Land has coached 20-plus games in indoor football, and he lives in the community. Both qualify him to assess just what needs to be done to revive the sport and help it thrive.
In continuing our blog coverage to supplement Sunday's stories on the health of indoor football in Fort Wayne, Land and I chatted recently. Here's some of what he had to say:
Some people have said, 'This needs to go away for a year or two and then start fresh.' Do you think that's the case or is the franchise on the right track with Bill Fahlsing and Mark Chappuis in the mix?
I would plan on having a team next year. The thing is, who would have thought we'd have a team going through an entire season this year? Bill and Mark, against all odds, got the team through this year. In my opinion, Fort Wayne owns them some help and a little bit of gratitude because that's why they're doing it. They aren't doing it to become George Steinbrenner. They're doing it because they know Fort Wayne loves football, and they know it's a football town and they wanted to help provide a service for this community they've lived in their whole life.
Is it possible to get back to the so-called glory days when there were 7,000-plus fans at games?
Absolutely. It can happen. Look at the last home game. They were well-entertained, and that's all they want. It can work. But then you bring these people in from out of town, and they don't (live in town) because they all want their money.
Do you think it's crazy for people to come in thinking they can make money on this?
I think guys who have their whole livelihood wrapped up in this can't do it. You can't do it if it's your single source of income, which means if you have 20, 25 guys who are local business owners and throw in a little bit of money into making the pot big enough, that's a business model that will work.
In using that kind of ownership structure where guys are plopping down $25,000 or so, aren't you worried there would be some issues, a power struggle, so to speak?
I'm sure there will be butting of heads. But I think that (structure) is the way it will work. There's got to be a chief that's elected, a board of directors and make it a legitimate business. You have to do that. You have to run it as a business.
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
June 19, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
Randy Brown will hit Year No. 18 this August at Memorial Coliseum, meaning he's been around long enough to have dealt with ownership for all the incarnations of indoor football in the city.
Brown and I chatted a few weeks ago for the stories that were published in Sunday's Journal Gazette. (Sorry for the delay. I've been out of town attending a family issue.) Here's some of what didn't make it in the paper, and be sure to check back on the blog daily through the week for other perspectives from the city's key players.
How do you think we've gotten to this point where we've had three franchises in three seasons?
I have to put the blame at the feet of the various leagues. They're just not doing a good job of pre-qualifying the respective groups.
How are you involved in the process?
Unfortunately, by the time it gets to us, our hands are pretty well tied because a league has made a commitment to an ownership group and there aren't too many options for the Coliseum at that point. We could say, 'no.' What we try to do is protect our interests and we do that through letters of credit and the lease and the term of the lease and all those things.
Two years ago, it seemed that you had an option of choosing. There was Bill Bean's proposal that would have kept the city in United Indoor Football and then the proposal from Jeremy Golden to play in arenafootball2. You chose af2. If Bean was the choice instead, we may not be where we are right now.
Hindsight is great, isn't it? But the other thing is the UIF had stability concerns. So it was a matter of we were looking at af2 as being a stable league, and af2 had endorsed an ownership group that they said they had extensive experience with. We made the best decision at the time with the information that was available to us. It turns out that all of the details that had been given to us weren't exactly as presented. It's one of those if you could do a do-over, but ... (leaves thought hanging)
You meet with the ownership groups?
We meet them. But at that point, most cases the decision has been made, and it's not the Coliseum decision. It's the league's decision. With the exception of the time when both the af2 and the UIF group here as pick an ownership group. More often than not, you don't have that luxury. It's 'here it is, take it or leave it.' It's a tough situation for a building to say to its market, to its citizens, we don't want this entertainment option. That's not what we do. We certainly want to make sure the facility and the market is protected as much as possible. That's why, by and large, we've been fairly demanding to the ownership groups, making sure the season ticket holders and the sponsors have been protected. I think that, by and large, the groups have stood by those previous commitments that have been made. It hasn't always been by their choice.
Were you ever concerned this season that the team wouldn't make it?
We've had concerns. It's not just indoor football where this has come up, if you think about the past. We've had the same issues, not necessarily our team, but the opposing team coming to town, wondering will they be here and what the ramifications of that are. Sports, it's an interesting business, and more often than not, people don't realize to the extent sports franchises operate on a shoestring, almost a 'by gosh' and 'by golly.' You hope it's going to hold together. Certainly this season was one of those seasons we had concerns.
Is there a point when the Coliseum just says 'no,' and you stop the cycle?
We certainly hope the next group has the money to be successful. We want a group that can come in, be successful, that can make a commitment, two to three years minimum, and then put together a winning team. The potential is there.
-- By Stacy Clardie, The Journal Gazette
June 18, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
I know I'm just dropping by with interim coverage of the Continental Indoor Football League, but this entity is just, well, indescribable.
The Fort Wayne Freedom's problems this season have been well documented: Bad ownership ... change in ownership ... quarterback quitting hours before game ... change in coach ... unpaid players ... no practices ... an incomprehensible playoff format.
The Freedom's season came to an end over the weekend -- though the CIFL still hasn't announced who made the postseason -- and at least we don't have to deal with the following stuff anymore.
According to the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, the defending champion and undefeated Rochester Raiders (12-0) have quit the league just before the playoffs begin. Why? On Sunday, hours before a scheduled game, the Flint Phantoms didn't show up and the Raiders weren't compensated the way they had been told they would be in such an event by the league.
Now, Rochester will join the American Indoor Football Association -- this season!! -- and play the winner of that league's playoffs in some sort of wacky Super Bowl.
The amazing thing is, according to the newspaper, this is the second pro sports team from Rochester to quit on the verge of the playoffs in two years.
-- By Justin A. Cohn, The Journal Gazette
June 09, 2008 in Freedom II misc | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (0)
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