An attempt to be humorous and logical about the Buffalo Sports Scene.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Its over



Well the rumored split, has finally come about. The 29 year old marriage between the two is finally over. Rochester will be moving on with their Florida mistress, while the Sabres will search for a new partner willing to work with their needs. They have gotten through some tough times, raised some high quality children, but the two have separate goals and needed to start over.

Lets look at the issues.

Neither side says the partnership can be saved this time. The major stumbling block: veterans and who pays for them.

The Sabres say if veterans are important to the identity of the Amerks, then it should be Rochester's responsibility to pay part or all of the salary. Buffalo's contention: it's not the Sabres job to sell Amerks tickets.

But Donner doesn't understand why Buffalo won't pay for veterans. He says they are critical to prospect development, and the older on-the-bubble players also are NHL-ready in case there are injuries in Buffalo.

"I've been puzzled why the Sabres don't have any depth guys here," Donner said. "Do you think they can make a serious run for the Stanley Cup with the depth guys they have here now? No way."

The Amerks' slow-pay practices have irked the Sabres for years. That was clear in a letter sent to the Rochester ownership group by managing partner Larry Quinn in January.

In requesting the start of talks regarding an extension of the affiliation, Quinn wrote that any new deal would require "some form of security to assure payment" (of affiliation fees).

When this dual affiliation first took shape, the Sabres wanted only about 13 roster spots in Rochester. They were leaving seven slots open to the Amerks to fill.

The Amerks, however, didn't have the money to pay for seven of their own players. Since the Sabres had no desire to pay for players with no NHL future, they brought the Panthers in as a limited partner in Rochester.

"That wasn't meant to be standard practice, it was more an aberration," Quinn said.


Yep, just like most divorces, its all about money. So sad to see this partnership break up, because some people are just too cheap. Looks like Quinn and the Sabres were just to stubborn to work together to provide Rochester with some AHL veterans who could help the Sabres down the road. And the Amerks were too cheap to buy their own players.

Lets see the Sabres can find that will make them happy and fulfill their needs. And lets face it the Sabres are kinda needy.

1 comment:

Downerguy said...

I always knew this day would come, well I've known for the past three weeks since GCFB started talking about it.

It's sad for everyone involved, but I think the real loser once again, is Buffalo. From Bill Simmons:
"Truth No. 2: Over the past 40-plus years, no sports city has had it rougher than Buffalo. It doesn't have a baseball team. Its NBA team fled west to become the Clippers -- a double whammy. Its greatest and most famous athlete is O.J. Simpson. It has suffered three of the toughest losses ever, all of which are so infamous they can be described in three words or fewer: "wide right," "no goal" and "Music City Miracle." Its beloved Bills lost four straight Super Bowls and currently have the second-longest NFL playoff drought (eight years and counting; the Cardinals haven't gotten in since '98). Is any under-45 American sports fan more scarred than the one who lives in Buffalo?"

But now added to this list, The Sabres are telling everyone they hate the Americans. THATS RIGHT I SAID IT!! BUFFALO HATES AMERICANS!!It's a sad day indeed, as always Rochester prevails.

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A Stay at home dad, who has more hot takes then your average stay at home dad.

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