OTTAWA - If the commissioner’s travel plans are any indication, the CFL’s return to the Canadian capital looks like a good bet.
With reports of a conditional expansion franchise being granted to a
Ottawa
as early as the 2010 season surfacing earlier this week, CFL
commissioner Mark Cohon sounded positive about the possibility during a
stopover here Thursday.
“I’m working hard to get this done,” Cohon said after speaking at a
sports business conference at Scotiabank Place, home of the NHL’s
Ottawa Senators.
“I think we’ve got the right (ownership) group and we’re working hard
to bring this back to Ottawa and we’ll have an announcement very soon.”
An ownership group led by Jeff Hunt, owner of the
Ontario Hockey League’s
Ottawa 67’s, and backed by Ottawa businessmen Roger Greenberg, chairman
and chief executive of Minto Developments, John Ruddy, president of
Trinity Development Group, and William Shenkman, chairman of Shenkman
Corp., are in talks with the league.
Ottawa has been without a CFL team since the league suspended the Renegades franchise following the 2005 season.
Hunt was part of a previous group, Golden Gate Capital, that was
interested in bringing the team back last year before it was forced to
withdraw from its pursuit when one of its major financial backers
became seriously ill.
Hunt told the Ottawa Sun in its Thursday editions that he believed the new group would be successful this time around.
“Are we close? Yes, I believe we are,” said Hunt, who believed the
announcement could come as early as next week. “There are a lot of
components to any conditional franchise.
“We’re just going through all the details that need to be dealt with.”
Cohon seemed to support those words.
“I was joking before (that) I’ll probably have to change my suit,
because you guys will recognize because I will be back soon,” he said.
“Very soon.”
When reached last night at an OHL board of governors meeting in
Toronto,
Hunt said he preferred to remain tight-lipped over Cohon’s comments or
the possibility of a 2010 start-up until they get past this stage.
“I really can’t even add anything to that, it’s too blue sky to think about those kind of details,” he said.
The franchise fee as well as a lease agreement and the condition of Frank Clair Stadium, home of the Renegades and the old
Ottawa Rough Riders, have previously been stumbling blocks for the CFL’s return.
Hunt said his group was “comfortable” with that aspect.
Cohon didn’t have offer any comment on the financial details or the
state of negotiations with the city regarding the stadium, but sounded
positive that a solution would be worked out and appeared to be a
supporter of Hunt’s group.
“I’m smiling so …,” he said. “I think it’s really important that
people know that my job as a commissioner is to make sure that we find
the right local owners and then empower them to make sure that they do
have a (good) relationship with the city.”