Hockey may be catalyst for arena development.The revitalization re·vi·tal·ize tr.v. re·vi·tal·ized, re·vi·tal·iz·ing, re·vi·tal·iz·es To impart new life or vigor to: plans to revitalize inner-city neighborhoods; tried to revitalize a flagging economy. of university hockey in Thunder Bay Thunder Bay, city (1991 pop. 113,946), SW Ont., Canada, on Thunder Bay inlet of Lake Superior. The city was created in 1970 by the amalgamation of the twin cities of Fort William and Port Arthur and two adjoining townships. may very well be the catalyst for future development of a new arena for the city, says the president of Lakehead University Lakehead University, at Thunder Bay, Ont., Canada; founded 1946 as Lakehead Technical Institute. It achieved university status in 1965. Lakehead has faculties of arts and science, business, education, engineering, forestry, library and information studies, nursing, . With the help of local investors it has only taken one year for the Lakehead University men's hockey program to become the envy of collegiate hockey in Canada. A successful hockey program at the university will help in the goal of building a new multiplex See multiplexing. arena facility in the city, says Fred Gilbert, Lakehead's president. And he thinks with the help of private investors it could be achieved within five years. "Somewhere in the city, and ideally on university land, there will be a multiplex facility built. We think the city has a need for avenue, that will hold five to six thousand people, not just for sports event;, we think a fine location would be on university property," Gilbert says. Prior to last year, university hockey was absent from the local sports scene for 18 years. In 1998 Gilbert arrived to fill the position of Lakehead University president, and one of his visions was to bring hockey back to the school. "As a northern university in one of the best hockey cities in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. it didn't make sense that we didn't have hockey," says Gilbert, "Hockey is one of the key connectors with the community because it's something that brings people together from all walks of life. It's a real connecting point for an institution that can appear to be aloof from the community." The next step in the revival of university hockey in Thunder Bay came in 1999 with the hiring of Tom Warden as athletic director Athletic director (commonly, "athletics director") is a position at many American colleges and universities, as well as in larger high schools and middle schools, which oversees the work of the coaches and related staff involved in intercollegiate or interscholastic athletic . Warden played university hockey with the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, and came to Thunder Bay in 1992 to play minor-professional hockey. He was very familiar with the hockey landscape in the community. Knowing that there would be no funding available from the university, Warden studied the business model used to privately finance a football program at Laval University Laval University, at Quebec, Que., Canada; Roman Catholic, coeducational, French language; chartered 1852, an outgrowth of a seminary established 1663 by Bishop Laval. In 1876 a branch was established in Montreal, which in 1919 became independent as the Univ. in Quebec City. He approached Jim Johnson, a local lawyer and well-known hockey dad, who has two sons playing in the National Hockey League National Hockey League (NHL) Organization of professional North American ice-hockey teams. The league was formed in 1917 by five Canadian teams; the first U.S. team, the Boston Bruins, was added in 1924. It today consists of 30 teams in two conferences and six divisions. , who became the lead investor and helped gather 25 investors who each invested $3,500 in seed money to become owners of the Lakehead University hockey team. "We recognize the importance that Lakehead University has in the community," Johnson says. "We want to promote L.U. and promote the city of Thunder Bay. We have the only privately owned university hockey team in Canada. We have done something no one else has been able to achieve and the city is achieving some self-esteem." In its first year the team had a winning record and went deep into the playoffs knocking off the defending national champions to a repeat win. But more importantly, notes Johnson, most of the home games were sell-outs, which had never happened in Canadian university hockey before. Johnson describes the first year success of the team as being "beyond our wildest expectations." |
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