Penguins Owner Rejects Kansas City

The new owner of the Pittsburgh Penguins officially ended speculation that the hockey team might move to Kansas City, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Sunday.

Jim Balsillie, chairman of the company that makes Blackberry devices, scoffed at the idea of moving his team to the City of Fountains. Balsillie lives in Waterloo, Ontario, and told the paper he wouldn’t want a longer commute to see his team play home games.

“Kansas City? I mean, come on,” Balsillie told the Post-Gazette. “Now I’ve taken a 40-minute flight [to Pittsburgh] and made it two hours, and to an unproven market.”

Earlier this year, the Penguins appeared to be the best chance for Kansas City to land a tenant for the Sprint Center arena. Connecticut real estate developer Sam Fingold, who had sought to buy the Penguins, had suggested that he would consider moving the team to Kansas City.

But Fingold’s deal fell through in August, and Balsillie signed an agreement on October 4 to buy the Penguins for $175 million. The deal still needs approval by the National Hockey League. Balsillie told the Post-Gazette that he expects to work in good faith with Pennsylvania politicians to negotiate the details of a new arena for the Penguins.

“I think I’m going to take the politicians at their word,” Balsillie told the paper. “I’m going to work with people to do what I can.”

For Kansas City, that means finding a new potential tenant for an area that could be empty when it opens next fall.



Whitlock Disses Mizzou Football
Missouri’s football team might be undefeated, but the Star’s columnist apparently knows something we don’t.

Mizzou fans are excited about the football team’s 6-0 start. But the Tigers haven’t convinced the Show Me State’s lone voter in the Associated Press poll that the boys in black are an elite team.


Missouri ranked 25th on the ballot that Kansas City Star columnist Jason Whitlock submitted after the seventh week of the college football season. The Tigers are No. 19 in the complete poll.


A page on the AP’s Web site shows the ballots of the 65 writers and broadcasters vote each week. The site reveals the extent of Whitlock’s disrespect for the brand of football they play in Columbia. The Tigers got more love from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s voter (11), Harold Bechard at The Hutchinson News (14), Sports Illustrated’s Stewart Mandel (16) and ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit (19).


The discrepancy suggests that Whitlock sees a weakness in the Tigers that others don’t. Or maybe he’s just getting a spot of revenge on Mizzou head coach Gary Pinkel, who acts around reporters as if he’d rather be chewing his linemen’s dirty socks. – By David Martin

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