UPDATED: Michael Whan, Hockey, the LPGA, and His Connection to Jonathan Ward
Multiple magazines and websites are reporting that Michael Whan will be introduced as the 8th commissioner of the LPGA Tour at a 9am press conference at Madison Square Garden. Currently, Whan serves as the CEO of Mission-ITECH Hockey.
Mission and ITECH merged together in 2004. Mission Hockey was considered a leader in roller hockey and ITECH was a specialist in protective hockey gear. The combined organization had roots in both California and Montreal, Canada. In the transaction, Whan was elevated from CEO of Mission to boss of the combined company.
The new LPGA Commissioner (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)
The company continued for four years when, in late 2008, Mission-ITECH was purchased by Bauer Hockey. Facilities in New York and Quebec were closed in May 2009 as part of the acquisition. 140 jobs were to be lost in the process.
At the time of the announced acquisiton, Whan said, "Consolidation is essential for the long-term success of the overall hockey industry. [The companies'] combined commitment will only help increase the overall health of the industry and of the sport itself."
Reports from hockey insiders indicated that Bauer was interested in Mission-ITECH's protective gear products for goalies. The brand was to be removed and all Mission-ITECH products would be rebranded as Bauer.
Earlier in the same year, Bauer Hockey was purchased from its owner Nike for some $200 million by Kohlberg and Company.
Kohlberg and Company is the current employer of Jonathan Ward, a man thought to be a serious candidate for the LPGA commissioner position.
That's where the known facts end. It is not difficult to make inferences about the financial strength of Bauer after its acquisition of Mission-ITECH in a floundering economy. Perhaps Whan's job security was in question and, given that, Kohlberg and Company made the connection between Whan, his golf experience at TaylorMade-adidas & Wilson Golf, and the open position for the LPGA commissionership.
UPDATE (1:28 pm ET): It appears that TaylorMade-adidas employees that worked with Whan are very high on his capability. One source said, "Mike was one of the best people I ever worked for." When adidas came into the picture around 2000, there was a mutual parting due to a difference in approach & philosophy, according to the source.
After Bauer bought out Mission-ITECH, Whan effectively retired from the company. While looking for his next gig, he wrote a fiction novel. The resounding sentiment on Whan is that he is an innovative and energetic worker. Perhaps a great break for the LPGA Tour.
0 recs |
4 comments
| Add comment
|
Comments
And, I should add, the inference between Kohlberg, Ward, and Whan shouldn’t necessarily be considered a bad thing.
Find me! Email: ryan@thegolfnewsnet.com, Twitter: http://twitter.com/waggleroomryan, or Facebook: http://facebook.com/waggleroom.
by Ryan Ballengee on Oct 28, 2009 10:00 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
I hope that this hire is remembered in the future as the one that really started the LPGA on the upswing.
They have a great product, no doubt. They just need to get it front of enough eyes, and then very good things will happen for it.
by Old Man Par on Oct 28, 2009 2:38 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
RB – I think it is very sporting of you to post such nice threads about the new commish. We all know you had your heart set on the office.l :-)
"this ball will fit in that fairway"
by courtgolf on Oct 28, 2009 5:08 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Wow – one day later and all is silent on the “east coast of Florida” front. All the analysis and wailing and gnashing of teeth over who would be the new commish – and now that Whan has the job, there is almost nothing being said.
Maybe this is a good sign for the LPGA that they hired someone who knows how to run things and is willing to take a little time to understand what he’s been hired to do – now the media has no room to pop off.
The only amusing thing I have seen has been from one of our favorite whipping boys, Ron Sirak, who didn’t know Whan’s age, yet still thought that a WAG at it was central to his story instead of just leaving it out until he knew. (does anybody really care ?) I really enjoyed Stephanie Wei’s story about how Sirak interrupted a conversation she was having so he could cuss out an LPGA official for not doing his (Sirak’s) job for him.
"this ball will fit in that fairway"
by courtgolf on Oct 29, 2009 11:27 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs

by 













