Private | |
Industry | Sports, Property management |
Founded | 1995 (as Orca Bay Sports & Entertainment) 2008 (present name) |
Key people
|
Francesco Aquilini, Chairman Trevor Linden, President of Hockey Operations Victor de Bonis, COO |
Products | Professional sports teams, Arenas |
$17.6 million | |
$119 Million | |
Owner | Aquilini Investment Group |
Subsidiaries |
Vancouver Canucks Utica Comets |
Website | http://canucks.nhl.com |
Canucks Sports & Entertainment, previously known as Orca Bay Sports & Entertainment, is a sports and entertainment company in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada that owns and operates the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League team and their home arena, Rogers Arena.
As Vancouver executive Arthur Griffiths overspent building General Motors Place, where the NHL's Vancouver Canucks and the upcoming NBA expansion Vancouver Grizzlies would play, on March 1995 he associated with Seattle billionaire John McCaw, Jr. - then a co-owner of the Seattle Mariners - to form the Northwest Entertainment Group, which would control both teams and the arena. On August 22 the company was rebaptized Orca Bay Sports and Entertainment, in homage to the killer whales that roam on the British Columbia coast. In 1996, McCaw assumed full ownership of the company and its assets.
Citing mounting losses, on August 21, 1999 Orca Bay announced that the Grizzlies, Canucks and GM Place are up for sale. The Grizzlies were purchased for $160 million in 2000 by Chicago businessman Michael Heisley, who after another lossy season relocated the team to Tennessee in 2001, where it became the Memphis Grizzlies. While for three years Orca Bay considered selling the Canucks to North American investors, by 2003 the team's improved performances had the company give up on this. In November 2004, Vancouver-based investment company the Aquilini Investment Group purchased 50% of the company from McCaw and two years later bought the remaining 50%. On 2008, AIG rechristened the company Canucks Sports & Entertainment feeling the team's brand was strong enough for its parent company.