Ben Hatskin: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Winnipeg Jets (1972–96)]]
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Revision as of 20:37, 3 December 2011

Benjamin Hatskin (30 September 1917- 18 October 1990)[1] was a Canadian businessman and the founder of the Winnipeg Jets.

Early life and education

Ben Hatskin was born in 1917 in Winnipeg to Russian parents. As a standout football player in high school, he became one of the first Canadian students to win an athletic scholarship to an American university. He played football for the Sooners at the University of Oklahoma. However, due to World War II, Ben's college football career was cut short, and so he returned to Winnipeg and joined the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the CFL.

Business career

During World War II Hatskin began raising racehorses and his wealth grew as the Hatskin family invested in everything from lumber companies to juke box distributorships.

Winnipeg Jets

In 1967, Ben Hatskin tried to win a National Hockey League franchise during the league's expansion. His bid failed, which fueled his desire to participate in a new, rival league, the World Hockey Association, in 1972. Hatskin knew that the credibility of the WHA depended on getting established hockey stars to join its teams. He aggressively sought out the services of Bobby Hull for his team, the Winnipeg Jets, and eventually signed Hull to a contract estimated to be worth at least $1.75 million.

Although it was one of the more successful teams in the WHA, winning 3 Avco Cups in 1976, 1978 and 1979. Hatskin had to ask for a public subsidy to keep the financially troubled Jets alive after 1974.

The team was absorbed into the NHL in 1979 and was purchased by Barry Shenkarow. At the end of the 1995 season Shenkarow sold the team to a consortium of Minneapolis businessmen, including re-insurer Steven Gluckstern and Dr. Richard Burke, whose fortune came from HMO's, who ended up moving the team to Phoenix, where it was renamed the Phoenix Coyotes. A few years later, hockey legend Wayne Gretzky bought an interest in the team and became their head coach.

References

  1. ^ Jews in Sports. Retrieved 6 April 2011.

Trivia

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