IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! LEAGUE page 66 1997 Catera The Caddy that Zips! Leather, moonroof, heated seats, assist, alum. wheels, Bose stereo cassette, garage door opener. Stk# V-7350 per mo. AUDETTE 7100 Orchard Lake Rd. • WEST BLOOMFIELD 851-7200 *36 Mo. closed end lease, 12,000 miles/yr. w/ 150/mile overage. Leasee responsible for 1st, sec., plates, use tax, acquisition fee, $999 down & 6% use tax. Leasee must qualify for GMAC approval, leasee responsible for excess wear and tear. To get pymt. multiply pymt. by terms + fees. C3 1:1 CONFIDENTIAL. CASH! EARN HIGHER YIELDS! Gold, Diamond and Estate Jewelry. Large Diamonds, Watches, Sterling, Signed Costume Jewelry. Antiques, Oriental Rugs, Art Glass, 50s and Classic Furniture. Complete Estates. High Value Items. % 4 .7U PY TOP PRICES PAID! Unlimited Resources T H E D E T R O I T J E W I S H N E W S 11101YEY MARKET* 68 VISIT ONE OF OUR LOCATIONS NEAR YOU! Sterling BERKLEY • (810) 546-2590 BIRMINGHAM • (810) 646-8787 CLAWSON • (810) 435-2840 ROCHESTER • (810) 656-5760 bank & trust SOUTHFIELD • (810) 948-8799 W. BLOOMFIELD • (810) 855-6644 , "We create solutions."e ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD EFFECTIVE AS OF 11/15/96. RATES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. 'MONEY MARKET: $2,500 MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED. STATEMENT FEES MAY REDUCE EARNINGS IF MINIMUM BALANCE IS NOT MAINTAINED. Call for private in-home or bank vault appointment. Andy Adelson 810-206-1100 c.1 CI SitadanattM‘Maall FREE Municipal Bonds Listing Receive Weekly Report my team deserves a bigger por- tion of it, and I'm not getting it.' "Well, when you own all the teams in the league, it doesn't mat- ter. The problem disappears," said Mr. Glieberman. The single-entity concept gets an endorsement from one of Mr. Glieberman's potential competi- tors, Detroit Lions CEO Chuck Schmidt. 'We in the NFL are a single-en- tity league in some respects," says Mr. Schmidt, "because we want to create economic stability and a competitive balance. "But even without knowing all the details of what Mr. Glieber- man has in mind, there is certainly some justification for the single- entity concept." • • Mr. Glieberman argues, "In every league, every week one team wins and one team loses. And as you go through the season, there are teams on the bottom and teams on the top. And if you look at the attendance records, you'll find that the teams on the top are doing better than budgeted, and the teams on the bottom are doing worse than budgeted. "If you were an owner owning the whole league, all you'd worry about was average attendance." The challenge, of course, is to make sure that there is formida- ble competition. But Mr. Glieber- man says that is very easy to accomplish. All you have to do is make sure your coaches are paid a salary with a hefty bonus, so that the coaches have a reason to win. "And you can do that with your coaches, your players, and the ad- ministration of the club," said Mr. Glieberman. "The general man- ager's or the administrator's in- centives are based on how he draws per capita and what his bot- tom line is. "If you do a single-entity league, it is no different than a business with divisions." The idea, Mr. Glieberman says, allows fans to bond to the players, knowing that the players aren't going anywhere else. The team can also safely develop players over time. But the real good news may be lower ticket prices, because the league is not competing against it- self for players. "What happens today in sports," explained Mr. Glieberman, "is that the coach or the general manager of the team is constantly in the owner's face saying, 'You know, I'm not winning right now, but if you get me the following guy, I can win for you. I've got to have that guy.' "Then the owner has got to think, 'If I don't get that guy, my people won't be accountable to me. What the hell am I going to do?' "So naturally, he goes out and he has to sign these players. And it becomes a merry-go-rouncl, with the players' salaries going up and up, and the quality of the game doesn't get any better. But it gets extremely expensive for the fans. Somebody's got to pay for the tick- ets. "I think you're seeing that in baseball now. And in basketball, too. They've got 19,000-seat stadi- ums, and they can't make the sta- diums any bigger because basketball doesn't work that way. So somebody's got to pay. "I think that sports is going to take on a whole new dimension. The environment of sports is go- ing to be entirely new where you see single-entity leagues. You can certainly have competition by mo- tivating through salaries an bonuses," said Mr. Glieberman. Under a single-entity league, said Mr. Glieberman, no city has to worry about losing their team "because the corporation that owns the team is not going to move the team just because they can get a better deal on a lease. They can open a second team. There's no di- lution. "Right now, what happens t an owner is he says, 'I want to move my team because I can get a better lease.' When a company owns the entire league, they just say, 'All right, we're making money in Detroit, we can open up in Cleveland too. All we've got to do is see if Cleveland will make money."' He says professional leagues have teams in the 12 major U.S. television markets. When they go beyond those markets, they're diluting. "So nobody wants to go to the other markets. "Look at the NFL thinking about going to Canada. And their dilemma is that if their average television revenue right now is $40 million a team, how would they get $40 million in Canada? "And you've got a union pro lem in Canada too," adds Mr. Glieberman. "If the players go on strike in Canada, you can't replace them at all. You're dead." He contends the National Hock- ey League is facing problems be- cause players are balking at playing in Canada where there are higher living costs and lower val- ue for the Canadian dollar. A single-entity league also pro- motes more bonding between play- ers, according to Mr. Glieberman, because the less disparity you have between salaries the more players are likely to play together as a team. Certainly Mr. Glieberman has learned much from his experience with the CFL. Take the issue of superstars. The CFL stars ar much closer to the fans than their NFL equivalents. In Canada, it is common for CFL players to meet with fans, and to attend autograph LEAGUE page 70