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George Gillett upset over speculation

We don’t like to say we told you so, but…

George Gillett upset over speculation
posted by Pat Graham, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published Wednesday March 25th, 2009

DENVER – George Gillett Jr.’s speech on global ownership Wednesday turned personal when he was pressed about the financial stability of his sports teams, Liverpool F.C. and the Montreal Canadiens.

An agitated Gillett paced around the stage at the SportAccord convention of global sports leaders, fuming that a private matter has suddenly drawn worldwide attention.

Gillett has engaged six investment advisors to reassess his varied holdings – for estate planning purposes only, he contends.

The central issue is whether Gillett would sell his 50 per cent stake in the English Premier League soccer team or offload the NHL’s Canadiens.

“It got reported … that I was selling assets, as opposed to estate planning,” said Gillett, who was forced to address the questions during what was supposed to be a lecture on global sports ownership in the 21st century.

“Even when you think you’re doing it right, it gets distorted. There is no story yet. We’ll find out when they give us the reports what it is.

“My guess is it’s unlikely that you will see any short-term sales. You may see a recapitalization here or there, we may bring in a partner or two. But I think it’s unlikely you will see any asset sales.”

Gillett and Liverpool co-owner Tom Hicks, who also owns baseball’s Texas Rangers and the NHL’s Dallas Stars, have a July deadline to refinance the loan that funded their takeover two years ago.

That financing package of about US$368.2 million must be renewed after a six-month extension was granted by the Royal Bank of Scotland and U.S. investment bank Wachovia.

But RBS recently announced huge losses in this global economic downturn and may not be in a position to extend further financing.

Selling his Liverpool stake would require the approval of Hicks, but Gillett owns 80.1 per cent of the Canadiens and the Bell Centre.

“The businesses are all in excellent shape financially, they all are healthy, they’ve got strong incomes and relatively small debt in this difficult world,” Gillett said.

“Yet, if you read the speculation that’s going on, you’d somehow or other read that we’re in financial difficulty and so forth.”

That speculation bothers him.

“I am not used to this kind of attention, and this kind of impoliteness,” Gillett said. “I am really offended by it, because it really is truly private.

“I know it affects assets that we all know and love but it doesn’t affect the operations of the business.”

That’s why his advice to Liverpool and Montreal fans is to focus on players, not front-office business.

“I don’t think owners should be that directly involved in a public way,” Gillett said. “I’m a very private person … That’s the way I am. That’s the way I prefer it to be.”

He said he accepted the invitation to appear at the conference before the Liverpool news started to surface and probably wouldn’t have done so had he known he’d get grilled about it.

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