August 11, 2008
Jennifer WhitsonCleaning crews are wiping construction dust from the 63,000 seats in Lucas Oil Stadium, prepping for the public's first
peek at the $720 million venue Aug. 16. But the hard work is only beginning for the city's Capital Improvement
Board, the entity charged with operating the stadium. The fumbling point: CIB is anticipating a $20 million
operating deficit for Lucas Oil Stadium in 2009.
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July 14, 2008
Anthony SchoettleSports agent Andrew "Buddy" Baker has left locally based law firm Ice Miller and is taking with him the firm's sports division,
IM Sports Services, which he wants to develop into a giant agency with a national reach. Baker's new firm, Exclusive Sports
Group, starts with a list of high-profile clients.
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June 30, 2008
Anthony SchoettleHerb Simon is taking a new hands-on approach
with the Indiana Pacers, which he co-owns with his brother, Melvin. In response to a string of losing seasons and off-court
mishaps involving players, Simon is transforming himself from a behind-the-scenes owner into a visible figure intent on reconnecting
the franchise with the community that once adored it.
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May 19, 2008
Anthony SchoettleThe Indiana Fever could spike this year. Ticket sales, sponsorship and the local buzz about the team are on the rise. But
perhaps most important, the Fever have key advocates in the Pacers Sports & Entertainment front office that the team simply
hasn't had before.
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April 28, 2008
Anthony SchoettleBeyond his last name, little is known here about Indianapolis Colts Vice President of Football Operations Chris Polian--even
though it's likely he represents the future of the franchise. In National Football League circles, Polian's stock has skyrocketed
as league owners have realized there's more to the 36-year-old than his famous last name.
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March 31, 2008
Anthony SchoettleRecently announced changes to the Indiana Pacers' front office leave questions about the team's long-term ownership unanswered.
While Larry Bird, Pacers director of basketball operations, is set to take over for CEO Donnie Walsh at season's end, there
is no indication what succession strategy, if any, exists for replacing team owners Mel Simon, 81, and Herb Simon, 73.
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March 17, 2008
Anthony SchoettleProfessional and collegiate basketball are on the brink of a landmark agreement that hoops insiders said will change the landscape
of the sport in this country. Proponents say it would be good for basketball, but others say it's an attempt to further commercialize
the sport.
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March 10, 2008
Anthony SchoettleBest-selling author Stedman Graham says professional athletes should think of themselves as "a corporation unto themselves."
Graham--perhaps best known as television star Oprah Winfrey's boyfriend--brought that message to the Indiana Pacers during
a three-hour private seminar in late January designed to get the players to rethink the importance of their individual images.
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January 28, 2008
Anthony SchoettleThe Indiana Pacers
have hit rock bottom. This month, the team slipped into last place in average home attendance among the 30 National Basketball
Association teams, falling behind the New Orleans Hornets, a team that is selling tickets in an area still ravaged by Hurricane
Katrina.
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January 7, 2008
Anthony SchoettleIn a meeting that had more X's and O's than Indianapolis Colts Coach Tony Dungy's game-day war room, FedEx District Sales
Manager Doug Knowles and his lieutenants decided which clients and prospective clients would be invited to the FedEx suite
which game, which FedEx employees would accompany them, and what ancillary activities would be planned.
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November 26, 2007
Anthony SchoettleThe Indianapolis Indians are rewarding stockholders in the franchise following a season in which revenue and profit grew,
thanks to significant increases in ticket, concession and merchandise sales. The higher profit fueled a 75-percent dividend
increase this year and an increase of more than $6,500 in the franchise's standing offer to repurchase shares.
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August 20, 2007
Anthony SchoettleThe Indianapolis Colts lost a slew of popular players in the off-season who were key to the team's Super Bowl run. The defections--though
unusual for a championship team--were business as usual for a franchise that has gained a reputation around the league for
its bold personnel moves.
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February 19, 2007
Anthony SchoettleRival board members are at war over the future of the American Basketball Association just as the Indianapolis-based professional
league appeared to be on the cusp of breakthrough growth.
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February 5, 2007
Anthony SchoettleBill Polian, the multi-sport schoolboy athlete from the Bronx, never had the advantage of an inside track. So he broke into
the National Football League the only way he knew how: by outworking and outsmarting the competition. By all accounts, Polian,
64 and now president of the Indianapolis Colts, is still at it.
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November 20, 2006
Anthony SchoettleAfter a 15-year run--the longest on the ATP Tour's North American Circuit--Thomson Consumer Electronics' RCA brand is ending
its title sponsorship of Indianapolis' professional men's tennis tournament.
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July 17, 2006
Anthony SchoettleOfficials for the WTA, which represents women professional players, and the ATP, which represents men, are considering shortening
the lengthy tennis calendar by imposing a short offseason-possibly a three-week, midyear respite that would collide with the
RCA Championships.
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January 16, 2006
Anthony SchoettleThe Indianapolis Colts' evolution from perennial patsy to Super Bowl favorite is a body of work with a seldom-told—and
often misunderstood—history. It's easy to see the hues all-pros Peyton Manning, Marvin Harrison and Edgerrin James
painted on this masterpiece season. President Bill Polian and Coach Tony Dungy certainly colored the landscape. And Offensive
Coordinator Tom Moore added his creativity. But theirs aren't the only signatures on this canvas.
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See, I told u Indyman and Dipsicle....this 8 days is overkill. It's barely worth a weekend....great job Tony George! Your dream has been fulfilled....he fans want the I r l back. Thats how good it was.....and that sucked.
I have been in training for a short time now but right off I can see that safety and quality are the number one issues, my experience as of late has been a positive one, the employees along with Jeff the plant manager and the operation supervisor as well as the engineers are a highly motivated group of people, what an asset for the area to have and for company's in need of a quality metal products.
Pimlico
While I understand the severity of their actions as well as everyones eagerness to hold them responsible for thier lost funds, these gentlemen did know how to make money. Dispite thier poor decisions over the ownership of Fair they had made several wise investments which paid them greatly. This proves they do have the potential to rebuild so they can repay. I do not feel they should live the life of luxuary but given an opportunity could they find ways of repaying the debts? They are doing nothing now but being a burden on tax payers. Just a thought!!!!!
You guys have some "interesting" comments to say the least. I hope you will call in and share those opinions starting June 1. I'm looking forward to having you on the air.