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Archive for January, 2008

Excuses

Posted by Carl on January 30, 2008

I know it’s been quiet around here lately, but there are a few valid reasons.  First, on the Former Lynx Player (aka FLP) front, there hasn’t been a great deal to report.  Second, I’ve got a lot of other non-baseball stuff going on right now and blogging has had to take a back seat.

Here are a few not so distant memories (and warmer times):

Now Pirates skipper, John Russell.

Watching for errant bats and foul balls.

Derek loads….

While the fellas (Ryan and Zakky) man the hot corner.

Posted in FLP, News | No Comments »

On partnerships

Posted by Carl on January 28, 2008

From today’s Ottawa Citizen:

Cash crunch paves way for controversial P3s

With city finances tight, planned spending on “soft infrastructure” limited in the long-range financial plan, and the political will to raise taxes substantially weak, the city will increasingly be relying on public-private partnerships to build such projects.

Riding on the success of these projects is millions — and one day, likely billions — of your tax dollars.

The city is already the most advanced major municipality in Canada when it comes to using “P3s,” and they are controversial.

and,

The city started using P3s after former mayor Bob Chiarelli embraced the idea.

I’ve blogged on this briefly before, and most of this is best left for the “full disclosure” blog, but there a couple of things that bear noting out in the open.  It’s pretty clear that Lynx Stadium was, from a financial perspective, a “Private-public partnership” (P3) success story, likely the first in Ottawa - and no one from the City will (or should) argue that they’re out any of their initial capital.  As part of amalgamation, the City of Ottawa’s debt to the City of Nepean vanished, poof*.  As you may recall, the City of Ottawa borrowed it’s share of the stadium construction costs from the substantially more liquid City of Nepean.  Various sources say that even without the “amalgamation effect”, Ottawa was already in the black - at least as far as the stadium was concerned.  In the beginning - i.e. 1993, revenues from stadium naming rights, taxes, signage, percentages of concessions all went to the City’s coffers.  Add to that the $500,000 that Mr. Darwin was repaying each year for the seven years he owned the team on top of the annual lease payments and you get the picture. 

I’m hopeful that the new arrangement with the Can-AM League marks a return to the “partnership” portion of the P3 equation.

* (b)    all the assets and liabilities of the old municipalities on December 31, 2000, including all rights, interests, approvals, status, registrations, entitlements and contractual benefits and obligations, become assets and liabilities of the city on January 1, 2001, without compensation.  1999, c. 14, Sched. E, s. 5 (3).

Posted in Can-AM, News | No Comments »

Gone camping

Posted by Carl on January 26, 2008

 

 I found Pedro:

Former player looking forward to his new career

Posted Thursday, January 17, 2008

Pedro Swann Jr. knows he can walk away from his professional baseball career with no regrets.

Swann managed to play just 28 games in the major leagues with three different teams, but the St. Mark’s High School and Delaware State University graduate had 17 years of solid performance in the minor leagues.

Swann, 37, first reached Class AAA, one level below the majors, with the Atlanta Braves in 1995. He decided to retire after playing last season at Class AAA Ottawa (Canada), a Phillies affiliate.  But Swann isn’t through with baseball.

He and his wife, Talayia, have opened the Pro Swing Sports Baseball Academy Inc., just off U.S. 301 in Middletown. Swann has hired Dwayne Henry, a former Middletown High School three-sport star who played for the Texas Rangers, as his pitching instructor. 

The 4,000-square-foot indoor facility will emphasize hitting, pitching, and speed, agility and athletic performance training. Programs are offered for boys and girls, age 9 through high school and college age.

Swann, an All-State player at St. Mark’s, will handle hitting instruction. His wife, who played four years of basketball at Middletown and has a master’s degree from Virginia Tech, will deal with the athletic performance and nutrition programs for athletes.

The Swanns live in New Castle with their three children, Xavier (9), Adriana (5) and Adonis (19 months).

“Sure, I would have loved to have played more in the major leagues,” said Swann, who was chosen by Atlanta in the 26th round of the 1991 June amateur draft. “Still, I feel I accomplished a great deal playing the game of baseball at the level I did. I had seven seasons where I hit .300 or better and had a total of around 1,900 hits.

“Being called up to the majors for the first time in 2000 with the Braves was quite a thrill. I hit one home run, but it was off Roger Clemens when he was with the Yankees. I enjoyed my career, but now it’s time to move in another direction. I’m really excited about this new venture.”  Swann said he decided to open the training facility after talking with two friends who are in the same type of business.

“I used to give hitting lessons at Dover High in the offseason on weekends at the clinic Kevin Turner has each year,” Swann said. “Kevin is a former Dover player and a good friend. I also talked a lot about this with Scott Bullett, a former major-leaguer who I knew from playing in the [winter] Mexican League. Scott would tell me about the academy he used to have. I thought it was something I would really enjoy.”

Swann, who grew up in Middletown, said he is excited to open his facility in his hometown. Bob Colburn, the former longtime baseball coach at St. Andrew’s School near Middletown and chairman of the state high school baseball tournament committee, said he is confident Swann will succeed.

Pedro Swann (center) has opened a new baseball academy in Middletown and he has hired another former professional baseball player, Dwayne Henry (left) to do the pitching instruction. On the right is Talayia Swann, Pedro’s wife, who will handle performance training and nutrition. (The News Journal/GINGER WALL)

Swann’s father, Pedro, was one of the finest football and baseball players to come out of Newark High School. He also excelled in both sports at DSU. His father was a youth baseball coach in Middletown for many years.

“I’ve known Pedro for a long time, and he’s going to do great at this,” Colburn said. “Pedro is a wonderful guy, and the area needs something like this. Dwayne Henry is another a great addition.”

Swann said he will offer group and individual instruction. Currently, he has a four-week winter clinics for $150 per player.

“I’m really excited to have Dwayne as our main pitching instructor,” Swann said. “This is a guy who knows the game inside and out.”

Swann had two great seasons at St. Mark’s. A left fielder, he hit .423 as a junior and .361 his final season. He hit a home run in his last four high school games, including a state championship win over rival Salesianum in the 1988 state tournament final. The last homer came in a Carpenter Cup game at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia.

Swann got his first major-league hit in 2002, playing with Toronto.

“It was Sept. 2, and I got it against Kansas City’s Mike Austin [a former Blue Rocks pitcher],” Swann said.

Among the major-leaguers Swann played with in the Braves minor-league system were All-Star center fielder Andruw Jones, pitcher John Rocker, catcher Eddie Perez and infielder Wes Helms, who played last season with the Phillies. In spring training and during his brief stints with Atlanta, Swann said he got to know pitchers Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine, who likely will be in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

“Some people don’t know it, but Maddux, he’s quite the jokester,” Swann said. “It was a treat to watch those guys pitch. I did hit against both of them in spring training, and that was no picnic. I remember getting in against Maddux and hitting the ball hard the first time. Some of the veterans said, ‘Hey, look at the rookie.’ Maddux really got tough on me after that.”

Swann said he has mixed feelings about the recent findings involving major-league players accused of using performance-enhancing drugs. The report last month by former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell got his attention.

“We started hearing about certain guys [using steroids and other illegal drugs] about 10 years ago. It was definitely well-known,” said Swann, who wouldn’t identify any of those players. “As a minor-leaguer, I got tested all the time. I kind of wish they started this kind of investigation a long time ago. It may have helped my chances and a lot of other guys to get to the majors sooner.

“However, I’m not bitter on anything. That’s just the way things went. Like I said before, I had a great career. I enjoyed going to the ballpark each day for 17 years.”

For more information on Swann’s academy, go to www.proswingsportsacademy.org or call 981-0459.

************************************************************************************************************

Always good to see a classy guy and blog favorite like Pedro at peace with his decision to retire.  At the Cat’s Pride barbecue near the end of the season, I had asked Gary Burnham about how much more time he thought he had before he’d move on.  He commented that 37 year old Pedro Swann was his “hero” - a guy who was in the best physical condition of all the players in the clubhouse.  It spurred Gary on to work out harder and more frequently.

Best wishes for the future from everyone here in Ottawa, Pedro!

Posted in FLP, Friends of the Lynx, News | No Comments »

I thought this was common knowledge

Posted by Carl on January 24, 2008

 

Phillybaseballnews “reveals” why J.A. and Zack struggled last year: Injuries.

Many fans wondered why two of the Phillies top ten prospects coming into 2007 fizzled so badly last season. Now, we know the reason; injuries.

J.A. Happ, who was ranked as the Phillies number one prospect by Philly Baseball News, posted a 5.02 ERA last season at Triple-A Ottawa, after not having an ERA higher than 2.81 in his minor league career. There were conflicting reasons on why Happ struggled so badly, including that he was disappointed over not getting a promotion to the Phillies or that pitching in Ottawa was simply not conducive to success for young pitchers. Now, assistant general manager Mike Arbuckle confirmed that Happ struggled all season with elbow woes, which kept him from heading to the Arizona Fall League after the regular season. Happ didn’t let anyone know that he was hurting and instead, pitched through the pain until he couldn’t stand it any longer and finally let the Phillies know just how bad it had gotten.

“We ended up in a rehab program with him [Happ] all fall,” said Arbuckle. “He seems to be 100%.”

The news on Segovia, who underwent Tommy John surgery earlier in his career, is a little scarier. Arbuckle and others in the Phillies organization suspected that something wasn’t right with Segovia, but he insisted that he was okay. Again, there were issues and after the season, Segovia underwent posterior shoulder release surgery and has been in Clearwater rehabbing his shoulder. “We felt he was restricted all year, so he ended up going in and having the procedure. He says he feels the best, and our guys in Florida say his deliveries and everything is better than we’ve seen in a long time,” reported Arbuckle.

Arbuckle believes that both pitchers are poised to bounce back in 2008 and could potentially challenge for spots in the Phillies rotation in camp or give the Phillies some insurance should they need starters later in the season. As far as Arbuckle is concerned, he’s happy that both pitchers appear to be healthy, but he isn’t happy about how the players handled the injuries. Happ saw himself as being insurance for the Phillies last season and figured that the call could come at any time, which is why he wasn’t quick to let the Phillies know about his injury. Instead, he tried to pitch through the pain and saw his numbers head to a point where there was no way the Phillies would recall him anyway. Segovia didn’t have as much pain as Happ experienced, but also knew that something wasn’t right, as did the Phillies. In the future, Arbuckle hopes that both players will be a little more forthcoming about injuries and wishes that there was a way to get through to young players that it’s not all about the short-term. “It’s very, very hard. Kids at that age tend to think they’re invincible anyway and you try to emphasize to them that if you’re hurting and you keep pitching, you could do long-term serious damage,” said Arbuckle. “It’s better to back you off short-term and maybe do some rehab to get you back on track,” is Arbuckle’s message to young players.

Happ and Segovia both took a hit in their status as prospects, but as Arbuckle was quick to point out, both could be poised for nice seasons in 2008. “I haven’t lost any faith in either of those guys,” stressed Arbuckle. “In fact, I see them as guys that we can look at and keep in our back pocket.”

In other FLP news, a glance of the Baseball America transaction update reveals that Gary Burnham has still not been signed by any team - MiLB or otherwise.

Posted in FLP, News | 1 Comment »

Welcome back

Posted by Carl on January 22, 2008

“The plan” to bring the Can-AM League to Ottawa always included keeping as many of the former Lynx key staff members in place.  The delay in reaching an agreement cost the new team some of those people who couldn’t afford to wait and see which way things were going to break (particularly after things became bogged down in late September and October).  Fortunately, Mr. Wolff was able to hang on to Lorraine, Francois and Josh, as well as picking up Don who worked for the Lynx back in the day.  These people will be able to “protect the Lynx legacy” far better than any blog.   A warm welcome to Richard and of course, Miles Wolff.  Nice articles in the Citizen and the Sun today (The Sun article courtesy (I believe) of Mr. Sager).

In FLP news, Geoff Geary signed a one year $1M plus contract with the Houston Astros.  Geoff was back and forth between Ottawa and Philly for the latter half of the 2007 season, but I was impressed with how good he was with the fans and his seemingly positive outlook.  Congrats, Mr. Geary.

Posted in Can-AM, Friends of the Lynx, News | No Comments »

Clueless - UPDATED

Posted by Carl on January 21, 2008

You would think that the editor would have the sense to call up someone colleagues like Darren Desaulniers or Don Campbell to discuss this first

Let’s play ball
 
The Ottawa Citizen

Opportunities to get a Triple-A baseball franchise don’t come along very often so the City of Ottawa should jump immediately on this one.

Mayor Larry O’Brien is a great salesman, after all he convinced Ottawans to elect him despite having never held political office, so it is time for him to show what he can do. It is possible the Toronto Blue Jays will be without a Triple-A affiliate at the end of next season as Syracuse, the home of its present farm team, is considering adopting the New York Mets.The Jays are our local major league team and have incredible marketing muscle and resources. We have one of the best minor-league baseball parks around and a professional sports market. People watch the Jays here and a similar synergy with the Expos in the early ’90s produced an International League attendance record.The Ottawa Lynx were never sold very well to Ottawa’s business community or the public. The Jays know how to market baseball and have fan identification for their players and brand in this market. A Jays farm team in Ottawa would boost the major-league club’s TV ratings in Ottawa and provide a source of revenue for the Jays if the team were owned outright by Toronto. That would give the Jays an interest in marketing the team here. As well, moving players between Toronto and Ottawa is very easy with superb air links.

The mayor should be on the phone today with the Jays arranging a meeting between him, the baseball club, some councillors and city staff to explore this option. This kind of opportunity occurs but once or twice in a lifetime. Let’s not lose a chance to properly use the $15-million taxpayer-owned ballpark on Coventry Road.

The Ottawa Blue Jays. It has a nice ring to it.

© The Ottawa Citizen 2008

This will not come to pass - for various reasons, but chiefly due to the fact that TORONTO DOESN’T OWN THE SYRACUSE CHIEFS!  I thought that the idea had been sufficiently shot down recently, but I guess the editor doesn’t read blogs.  Emailer Joe sums up the situation:

They are a community owned team. If the Blue Jays want their Triple A affiliate in Ottawa, someone would have to buy a AAA franchise and move it to Ottawa, then the Blue Jays would have to sign a PDA with them. Or the Blue Jays could buy a team themselves I suppose and move them to Ottawa.The Richmond Braves situation is different in that they are owned by the Atlanta Braves. They can do whatever they like with the team. Moving it is apparently what they’re going to do after many failed attempts at a new ballpark.The Chiefs are looking to switch affiliations, to the Mets from the Jays, not move to Ottawa. They have been a community owned team since 1961. The Blue Jays do not own them.

Good Lord.  This is an obstacle which the fledgling Can-AM team didnt’ need.  And I’m sure that the Lynx and Kyle Bostwick will be flattered when they hear that “(t)he Ottawa Lynx were never sold very well to Ottawa’s business community or the public”!

Gotta go - if only to resume banging my head against the wall.

(Cross posted to the Can-AM and “full disclosure” blogs.)

*** UPDATE ***

Sorry - I forgot to include acknowledgements for tipping me off to the editorial.  Tip of the hat (or “hat tip”, HT) to Jean-Pierre Allard and Pete Toms for alerting me to the story.

Thanks to Neate for posting up over on the Can-AM blog as well.  (He posts up on the issue over at Out of Left Field as well.)

Posted in Can-AM, Friends of the Lynx, News | No Comments »

They’re going to need a bigger bus in Richmond

Posted by Carl on January 19, 2008

One of sufficient size to allow the mayor to throw all the fans under it.

Richmond mayor Doug Wilder said this morning on a radio show that the city did not support spending millions of taxpayer dollars for a new ballpark, which does not necessarily jibe with earlier plans. Wilder also talks about being embarrassed by sagging at attendance R-Braves games, notably a playoff game last season: “I looked around and you could have counted the teams, you could have counted the groundskeepers, you could have counted the service people - we didn’t have a thousand people barely. I sat next to [Atlanta Braves Executive Vice President] Mike Plant and I was embarrassed,” he said this morning on Lite 98.1 FM.

Yikes.  As the owner of a minor league club, I’m not so sure I’d be banging down the doors to get into Dixie’s capital.  While the mayor was front and centre, blaming his own constituents for the loss of the team (blogger: That oughta help around election time.), the Times Dispatch was placing the blame on everyone - the City of Richmond, the Braves and the citizens of Richmond itself.

So forgive me if I’m not turning cartwheels that AA and A minor-league baseball teams are lining up to replace our AAA Richmond Braves in 2009.

Big Whoop. We’ll still be a minor-league town — barely. We’re a region with well over 1 million people. When are we going to start behaving like it?

Talk about your tragedy of errors.

The columnist, Michael Paul Williams, sounds a warning which could just as easily apply to us:

“And that’s our problem: we’re not passionate about our sports here in Richmond.  Frankly, we don’t seem to be passionate about anything.  Well we better get passionate about something, and quick.  

Or we won’t even be a minor league city.”

Posted in News | No Comments »

More franchise shuffling

Posted by Carl on January 18, 2008

Fortunately for ball fans in Richmond, Virginia, it seems that there won’t be any shortage of suitors lining up to move in at The Diamond - just not AAA.  Interestingly, there’s another story in today’s Citizen about one of the teams rumored to be on the move in 2009 - the Syracuse Chiefs. 

“New York Senator Charles Schumer has begun lobbying for the New York Mets to move their Triple-A affiliation from New Orleans to Syracuse for 2009, and for the Blue Jays to move out. According to a report in the Syracuse Post-Standard, Schumer is close a friend of Mets owner Fred Wilpon and has been discussing the issue with him in recent weeks.”

The local angle, besides the Canadian part of the story, is the possibility that Ottawa could be in the running as the Chiefs new home. 

“Should the Blue Jays be forced to find new accommodations, it is possible Ottawa — and its Triple-A stadium — could be a destination the team might consider for its minor league team.

Jay Stenhouse, vice-president of communications for the Blue Jays, said the team would do its due diligence if forced to look for a new home for its affiliate.

“If we are faced with the situation of finding a new Triple-A affiliate, we will explore all the options available to us,” Stenhouse said in an interview.

But he stopped short of saying that Ottawa would be given special consideration should the Chiefs have to relocate. “We’d look at all our options,” Stenhouse said.”

Not to throw cold water on anyone’s hopes, but I just don’t see that as a possibility.  In addition to the reasons noted by Miles Wolff, I don’t think the International League would permit another franchise here in Ottawa after what’s happened over the last few years.  However, I still believe that a Jays connected minor league franchise is the only type of affiliated ball which could succeed north of the border.

Posted in Can-AM, News | 10 Comments »

With sympathy

Posted by Carl on January 16, 2008

Nice to see that FLP Danny Sandoval was picked up by the Cleveland Indians in the latest Baseball America MiLB transactions update.  Still nothin’ on Gary - unbelievable that no one has signed him yet.

Thanks to FOTB (friend of the blog) Tricia for alerting me to this story yesterday, and as the title suggests, it cuts pretty close to home: Altanta’s moving their AAA team from Richmond to Gwinnett County, Georgia for 2009.  No matter where the blame lies, you just know that right now there’s a 10 year old boy in Virginia who has cried himself to sleep over the news of the loss of his team.  I lived that moment back in September, and to say it wasn’t fun is probably disrespectful at best.  Unfortunately for baseball fans in Richmond, there doesn’t appear to be any white knight waiting in the wings to move into The Diamond for 2009.

Our genuine condolences go out to our friends in Virginia; as Tricia noted, this news is all a little too fresh.  One can only hope that for AAA teams located more than an hour from the parent club, that this is not the continuation of a trend.

“In a “super-market” the major league club arranges its affiliate minor league clubs into the same geographical region to pick up fertile ground to sell subscription television packages on cable. These networks are not covered in MLB’s revenue-sharing agreement. It is an owners’ bonanza.”

Posted in FLP, News | 2 Comments »

On Loyalty and “Doing the right thing” - UPDATED AGAIN

Posted by Carl on January 13, 2008

Regulars around these parts know that for a period of time this past season, I kept tabs on the Vermont Lake Monsters, particularly during their run at the postseason (they came up just short).  As a family, we took a short weekend trip down to the Burlington area and took in a game which I posted up on back in August.  What I probably didn’t mention was how impressed I was with the operation of the team, and the fan support for it.  People have wondered aloud over on the Can-AM blog what the response to an Indy League team will be in Ottawa - i.e. why will people support a less prestigious brand of baseball, when they wouldn’t support AAA?  You wouldn’t know you were dealing with short season, Single A ball in Burlington - on an August evening that threatened rain, and drawing from a population of less than 40,000 souls, Centennial Field was rockin’ with over 2,800 fans.  That’s a ratio of nearly 1 person attending for every 13 in the city.   To put that figure into perspective, were Ottawa to draw so well, the 77,000 fans showing up for each game would present more than just a massive transit problem getting to and from 300 Coventry Road (to say nothing of the [cough] parking).

I dug these articles out of the Internet and have posted them here - I invite/urge you to read them in their entirety.  Not only do they give some insight into how successful a minor league franchise can be (blogger: read should have been”, in Ottawa’s case), they reveal a great deal about the corporate culture we lost with the departure of Mr. Pecor.  I would love to tell Mr. Wolff to go after C.J. Knudsen, but it would be a fool’s errand: One thing we’ve learned here in Ottawa is that Mr. Pecor’s people are fiercely loyal.

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1/7/08

Vermont Expos General Manager C.J. Knudsen (left) says that plays well with fans, who enjoy the aura of an historic venue.

Play Ball

The Vermont Expos attract more than 3,000 fans to each home game in Burlington due in large part to the front office’s effort to keep the audience entertained

by Sean Toussaint

On a warm June evening, under a pastel sky filled with the mesquite aroma of the barbecue, a family of four waits for tickets outside Centennial Field in Burlington to watch the Vermont Expos take on the Auburn Doubledays.

The father elicits cheers from his two young daughters with rides on his shoulders and promises of hot dogs and ice cream. “Who’s excited to see Champ?” asks the father, referring to the Expos’ popular mascot. “I am! I am!” the children shout.

Welcome to minor league baseball in Vermont, a summer pastime that is as much about entertainment, advertising and merchandising as it is about sports. “Obviously, we’re a baseball team,” Vermont Expos general manager C.J. Knudsen says, “but we’re geared more toward entertainment than anything else. So when people come to the ballpark, it’s our job to make sure they have a great time, and they’re entertained, and hopefully that they want to come back.”

Planning for that entertainment and a way to fund it takes place far away from the roar of the crowd and the crack of the bat, in a cramped, nondescript office on the ground floor of the Champlain Mill in Winooski. There, five full-time employees gather at the end of the season in September to figure out the schedule for the 38 home games that will be played almost a year later. The Vermont Expos play another 38 games on the road each year.

Centennial Field is the oldest minor league ballpark in use in the country.

In September and October, Knudsen and company put together proof of performance packages for each of their 130 or so advertisers and try to persuade them to resign with the organization for another year. November and December are slow months, Knudsen admits. While almost all of the revenue is generated in the summer, the Vermont Expos have a memorabilia shop open all year in the Champlain Mill and on its Web site.Come January, the front office is preparing and selling advertising packages for billboards, promotional nights and other special events, and assistant general manager Mike Simpson starts putting together group sales, season tickets and mini-packages.

March to April is deadline time, with everyone making sure accounts, events and advertising plans are lined up. “A lot of people think we’re sitting around in June and all of a sudden decide to put on a baseball game, but there is so much planning and work that goes into each season,” Knudsen says.

Simpson is a testament to that statement. He considers himself a baseball fan, but says he spends so much time working with ticket holders and advertisers that he can name all of his clients but only a few players on the Vermont Expos roster. “Remembering the name of a business partner is so important,” Simpson says. “I get picked on a little bit because I’m more familiar with our clients than the players on the field, but I’m proud of that fact. It’s my job to make sure every account is being serviced and make sure they’re getting what they paid for. I leave it up to the rest of the guys to be creative.”

During the summer, the front office goes from planning ahead to dealing with the present. The organization has in-house concessions and ticket sales, so the payroll jumps to include 80 part-time employees during the season. Knudsen says he loves being at the ballpark, but he doesn’t see as much of the game as he would like. One minute, he says, he’s talking to a visiting manager; the next he’s finding baseballs for the umpire; another, he’s moving traffic around the parking lot.

Centennial Field has a capacity of 4,400. Under Knudsen, who’s in his second year as general manager, the team has attracted an average of 3,300 fans per game. Since the team came to Burlington in 1994, almost 900,000 tickets have been sold. Knudsen expects to sell the millionth ticket at the 11th game of the 2002 season. “It’s amazing we’ve been able to draw 3,300 fans a night, especially when you consider the size of the state is a little over 600,000 people,” Knudsen says.

The Vermont Expos are one of three Single-A minor league baseball teams (the second lowest level in the four-tier minor leagues) under the major league Montreal Expos. Ray Pecor purchased the franchise after hearing Montreal was looking to move it from Jamestown, N.Y. Pecor gives the Montreal organization a place to try out players, and pays for their lodging and travel expenses. In return, Montreal gives Pecor a roster of players and a coaching staff. Pecor owns the Vermont Expos’ logos and trademarks, so sales of the team’s merchandise goes straight to his organization.

Vermont’s last minor league baseball team, the Double-A Seattle Mariners, left town in 1989, after which Pecor says community members asked him to bring in a team. “The community really missed it, and I think I always wanted to own a baseball team,” says Pecor, who owns the Lake Champlain Transit Co. “If minor league baseball wasn’t here to begin with, I probably would never have brought it back.

“The only time you make money off a minor league baseball team is when you sell it. There are so many expenditures that you really can’t make money off this. It’s a love, more than anything else.”

Pecor says Montreal wasn’t worried about having a team in the second-least populated state in the nation and was excited to bring it closer to Canada. The N.Y. Penn League, with which the Vermont Expos are affiliated, had some reservations. The league was worried that Burlington might be too far to travel for most of the teams, which are based in southern New York and Massachusetts. It was also worried about the quality of Centennial Field, the oldest minor league ballpark in use in the country.

“That worry was taken care of when we renovated the field (in 1994),” Pecor says. “It took a great deal of money. In most instances, the city, state or county pays for all of that because it’s good for the city to have a minor league baseball team and there is some income from sales tax. I knew that wasn’t going to be the case with us. In the end, the state put up some money, and I had to put up the rest.”

The University of Vermont, which owns the park, built the field in 1922. Knudsen says the Vermont Expos lease the field from UVM, pay for upkeep and are able to schedule their season before any other events at the stadium. One of the first steel stadiums built in the country, Centennial Field is split into three sections: reserved seating, which is the only area with chairs; the alcohol-free zone; and a section that allows drinking. The latter two sections are cement and avid fans recommend bringing a seat cushion for comfort.

While the Vermont Expos don’t have to compete for fans against other minor league baseball teams, Knudsen says they’re constantly competing against other forms of entertainment, whether it’s the movies, the beach or dining out. “Even though it’s a totally different event, we’re in competition for that entertainment dollar. That’s really what it comes down to.”

The importance of that competition is written all over the walls of Knudsen’s office. A print-out of Vermont’s summer events that might affect attendance hangs on a bulletin board, next to a list of some of the bigger events Knudsen knows will affect turnout. Among them are the Champlain Valley Vermont Exposition, a NASCAR event in Loudon, N.H., the Burlington Chew Chew Fest and the first day of school.

Of course, weather plays a large role in luring fans to the ballpark. Because the N.Y. Penn League doesn’t enforce makeup games for rain-outs, the Vermont Expos faces a major and unplanned loss of revenue when a game is canceled due to weather.

“When you’re such a seasonal business, one year you could have a tremendous year the weather could be nice and you could have 4,000 people at every game. The next year you could have a rainy July and August and you have six or seven rain-outs that you can’t make up. It’s a great industry to be involved in, but it’s also a risky industry because it is so weather-dependent.”

This year’s home opener was rained out, and “if there’s one game that can’t be rained out, it’s the home opener,” Knudsen says. The Vermont Expos were able to hold a doubleheader the following day, giving fans admittance to two games for the price of one.

Tickets, priced from $1 for children 12 and younger to $6 for reserved seating, don’t account for much of the organization’s revenue. The front office gives away many tickets to promote the team. Members of Champ’s Kids Club, for example, pay $7 for a year membership, which includes Vermont Expos memorabilia, a chance to play on Centennial Field and free admittance to Monday night games. “It’s a way for us to give back to the community,” says Adrienne Wilson, director of public relations. “This way we get involved and bring people into the ballpark. We’re getting our name out in a positive way, and we’re still being recognized.”

The most recognizable part of the Vermont Expos organization, Wilson says, is an 8-foot green sea monster named Champ. The team uses the mascot in the majority of the company’s print advertising, as well as public appearances and special events. After the Vermont Expos’ first season, the person who played Champ wanted to leave the organization and bring the rights of the character with him. After a short legal battle, the Vermont Expos retained rights to the mascot. “Champ really is the cornerstone of the organization,” Knudsen says. “He’s very identifiable and is able to stand out quite a bit. He brings fans into the seats without a doubt.”

When the 26-year-old Knudsen returned to the Vermont Expos as assistant general manager in 1997 after working as an unpaid intern in 1995, he says he and then-general manager Kyle Bostwick would spend endless hours coming up with promotional ideas that weren’t always implemented because of the lean size of the staff. Knudsen says Pecor was very receptive, and soon the team had a director of public relations and a head of sales and advertising.

“It’s been great to see the organization grow and have some of these far-fetched ideas we had actually get done,” Knudsen says. “The best thing about minor league baseball is anything you think of, you can pretty much do. The sky’s the limit, whether it’s the Windjammer Flip or Follies or the Vermont Teddy Bear Slingshot. The client is happy because they get to see their advertising dollar at work, and the fans like the promotions.”

The Windjammer Hospitality Group has advertised with the Vermont Expos since 1994, Windjammer director of marketing Karen Wisehart says. Wisehart approaches the Vermont Expos with a budget and a vague idea of what the group would like to do and the Vermont Expos do the rest. This year, the Windjammer’s advertising plan includes the between-inning promotion, one of the 75 billboards in the outfield, and a Halloween theme night with prizes for the best costumes.

“This is a way for us to target our audience most important, families like nothing else,” Wisehart says. “The games and other promotions are a good way to have a captive audience. We are definitely getting the attention of 3,000 people a night; we’re getting our name mentioned; and we’re associated with the Vermont Expos.”

Knudsen says the Vermont Expos gear a promotion around a company or find a company they think will make a good fit with an idea. It’s tough to plan one of those promotional events in the middle of January, Knudsen says. “You have to be careful about how much money you spend on a special event. When we’re putting one together, we’re asking ourselves if it is going to bring in an additional 500 people or at least bring people back another time.”

Knudsen graduated from Rice Memorial High School in South Burlington in 1992 and headed to Keene State College in New Hampshire. He dreamed of playing major league baseball, but when he realized his arm wasn’t strong enough, he decided to make his way to the big leagues in the office. He majored in physical education with a concentration in sports management and a minor in business management. Three of Knudsen’s front office coworkers started as interns, just like he did. “Baseball is a tough profession to break into,” Knudsen says. “Getting that internship is how I got my foot in the door.”

After graduating in 1996, he moved to Houston following his family after his father’s transfer with IBM. When Bostwick became general manager in 1996, he called Knudsen and said he was accepting applications for the assistant manager position. In 1997, Knudsen moved into the Vermont Expos front office and within three years was promoted to general manager after Bostwick was promoted to vice president. “Never did I believe that at 25, I would be a G.M. of a professional baseball team. It’s a dream come true.”

Knudsen still has his eyes on the majors. He says he has to put his time in at the bottom before moving up the ladder, like Bostwick did, who is now general manager of the Triple-A Ottawa Lynx, another franchise owned by Pecor.

Pecor has his own dreams. “Where do I see this club going next? My dream is to move into a new stadium the teams with the new stadiums are the only ones who beat us in attendance. I’ve talked to a few people about it, and a lot of people support it, but nobody is sure where we should put it.”

Tom Jackman

Originally published in August 2001 Business People-Vermont

AN INTERVIEW WITH VERMONT G.M. C.J. KNUDSEN

[December 23rd] — The past two years haven’t been kind to the Vermont Lake Monsters. Since their parent club’s move from Montreal to Washington D.C., Vermont has a record of 51-100 and has finished in last place in the Stedler Division of the New York - Penn League each season.

But don’t blame general manager C.J. Knudsen and his staff.

During a time when the S.S. Expo was sinking faster than an Eminem song on the Country and Western Charts, the Expos/Lake Monsters remained loyal to their parent club. Knudsen told me that one of the most popular promotions has been their “Tribute to Montreal” night that has become a yearly affair. “We bring someone in that has played for the Montreal Expos, and this year it was none other that ‘El Presidente,’ Dennis Martinez” Knudsen said. “He was a great guest to have at Centennial Field and the fans always love to see former Expos greats come and cheer on our Lake Monsters!”

Vermont’s history with the Expos/Nationals dates back to 1994. The success - and failure - of the Lake Monsters since the early years reflects the importance of player development at the major league level. From 1994-1997 - when the Expos were producing a cadre of solid major league players - Vermont’s record was a lofty 139-86, including a league championship in 1996. In the years that followed contraction talks and ownership by Major League Baseball, however, the Lake Monsters faced difficult times, crafting a 104-193 record.

Loyalty is a wonderful thing, and for the Lake Monsters, good things are about to happen. After years of drafts based on “signability,” the Washington Nationals are once again stocking their minor league affiliates with talented players.

After being known as the “Expos” for more than a decade, Vermont changed it’s name and colors in 2006. With great fanfare, the team introduced the “Lake Monsters” name, logo and colors to their fans last winter. I asked C.J. how the name change came about. “The process of changing the name of the team from the Expos to the Lake Monsters began prior to the 2005 season. We received over 30,000 suggestions from fans during our ‘Name Your Team’ contest and we certainly received a variety of suggestions. The ‘Lake Monsters’ name really stood out because of the connection to our legendary mascot, Champ, as well as his home in Lake Champlain.” When asked if there were other team names that were considered, Knudsen said that the “Green Mountain Boys” was also considered but believed that “Lake Monsters” was a better fit for both the team and its fans.

The Lake Monsters play at Centennial Field, in Winsooki, just outside of Burlington. I asked C.J. if Centennial was “up to date” compared to the other New York - Penn league facilities. “Not many people are aware of this, but Centennial Field is one of the oldest baseball parks in the whole country,” C. J. told me. “This year we actually celebrated Centennial Field’s 100th anniversary. As you may guess, it lacks some of the bells and whistles of the newer parks. However, what it lacks in amenities it makes up for in tradition and charm and it’s really a great place to see a ballgame.” Some of the newer parks in the league are really “mini” major league parks. C.J. likes Keyspan Park in Brooklyn and the new Medlar Field on the campus of Penn State Univerisity, new home for the State College Spikes.

Justin Maxwell, who played for Vermont last year, has long been a player that has intrigued me. A product of the University of Maryland, Maxwell missed much of his college career to injuries, and was drafted on talent and not accomplishments. I asked C.J. how Maxwell did last season. “Justin was able to play in 74 of the teams 76 games this past season, so it seems as though he is over any injuries he may have had in the past. Justin’s speed and ability to steal bases was one of his attributes that impressed me the most. He lead our team this past season with 20 stolen bases and his presence on the base paths helped disrupt pitchers trying to get out of a jam.”

Though the won-loss record didn’t reflect it, the team had many quality players on the roster in 2006. I asked C. J. if there were any players who intrigued him. “The player our fans really got behind here in Vermont that Nationals’ fans could see relatively soon is Jack Spradlin. He falls under the category of being a one of those crafty lefties like Tom Glavine or Jamie Moyer that work both sides of the plate. We had a few players who could be catching the eye of Nationals fans within a few years. Mike Daniel and Justin Maxwell really performed well and have a strong shot of making it to the big club in a few years.”

I was curious as to who in the Nationals front office Mr. Knudsen talks to on a regular basis. He told me that most of his communication is with with their Director of Player Development, Andy Dunn. Matters most discussed, C. J. says, are “upcoming player transactions” as well as “potential moves affecting our team.” Curious if he was able to just pick up the phone and talk to Jim Bowden anytime he wanted, Knudsen replied, “There is rarely a time when it is necessary for me to speak with Jim Bowden because I am usually in contact with Andy Dunn. The Nationals are great to deal with though and I’m sure Jim would be more than happy to speak with a representative of any one of the Nationals affiliates.”

Finally, I was curious about who calls the shots regarding who plays and how often. Could Dunn call and say, “play so-and-so until I tell you to stop?” I mean, how much autonomy does a short-season manager really have? A lot, it seems. “The nature of our affiliation with the Nationals as well as the all other clubs is we provide their young players a place to play. The decisions in terms of playing time are made by the manager hired by the parent club. Our manager works closely with the Nationals to come up with plans to help develop their minor leaguers to the best of their ability, and sometimes it may take putting a player in one spot in the lineup and leaving him their for a full season no matter how he plays to help with his development.”

What drew me to the Lake Monsters for my first “Meet The G.M.” story was their website. Usually, the lower the affiliation, the smaller the league, the less attractive the team’s website is.

Not the Lake Monsters.

Their website, reinvented last year, is full of all kinds of eye candy and easy to use links. Sure, they are trying to sell their products (and I highly reccomend taking a look at their on-line store — they’ve got some great stuff), but it’s done tastesfully and doesn’t give you the sense that sales is the only reason the website is there. Take a few minutes and learn about the team, their players, history, Centennial Field and — most importantly — their future.

One day very soon, the Lake Monsters are going to return to the top of the New York - Penn League, and hopefully, they’ll get there with Nationals’ talent.

If you love the Nationals, love the Lake Monsters too. Say thank you for being part of the Nationals’ community by visiting their site and introducing yourselves to all the team has to offer.

About the G. M.: 2006 will mark C.J.’s eleventh season in professional baseball. He started his career in 1995 as an intern with the Vermont Expos, before graduating from Keene State College in 1996 with a B.S. in Physical Education, specializing in Sport Management, and achieving a minor in Business Management.

Knudsen rejoined the Expos in 1997 as the Assistant General Manager and was promoted in 2000 to his current position of General Manager. During Knudsen’s tenure, the Lake Monsters have continued to draw over one-sixth of Vermont’s population to Centennial Field each summer. In 2003, he was recognized for his work by receiving the NY-Penn League Executive of the Year award. He also serves as the Executive Director of the NY-Penn League Charitable Foundation, which gives back to the hometowns of the league’s teams. Knudsen was born in Poughkeepsie, NY and raised in Jonesville, VT. He graduated from Rice Memorial High School in 1992. He spends his “limited” free time with his family and friends, fishing, skiing, running marathons, and occasionally playing a bad round of golf.

*** UPDATE ***

Sorry that the pictures didn’t work out for the first article - I’ve given up trying to paste them in (maybe tomorrow).

Apparently, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree:

Good business makes good sense.

There’s a business axiom that says you succeed when you know your customers and serve their needs.

Evidently Trey Pecor of Lake Champlain Transportation understands that.

Pecor made what seemed like a sound business decision a few weeks back. LCT’s Essex to Charlotte run was losing money. It made sense to shut down for the winter.

But Pecor heard from a lot of his customers, found out how many would spend more time on the road, more money for gas, and have more trouble making connections. He also understood the impact that could have on the economy.

So he did the right thing. The ferry will stay open. And instead of just issuing some corporate memo, he went to a meeting of concerned riders to tell them first hand.

LCT is also asking those riders and area officials to help them find out ways to make the Charlotte-Essex run sustainable long term.

We bet Pecor will listen to his customers then, too.

*** UPDATE II ***

For the cynics, yes, the Lake Champlain Transit Company’s southern run between Charlotte, VT and Essex, NY is still running in the winter.

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