The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Friday, October 18, 1996              TAG: 9610180673
SECTION: SPORTS                  PAGE: C2   EDITION: FINAL 
TYPE: Special Preseason Pullout Guide to the Hampton Roads Admirals
SOURCE: BY HARRY MINIUM, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: NORFOLK                           LENGTH:  364 lines

NEW OWNERS, NEW ERA FOR TEAM

The lights are scheduled to go down at Scope tonight at 7:23, seven minutes before the Hampton Roads Admirals open their eighth season.

One by one, the Admirals and Charlotte Checkers will skate onto the ice bathed in multicolored strobes from a new, $23,000 lighting system.

When the lights come back on, there will be clowns and face-painting in the hallways and a mascot roaming the stands. The music will be jazzy. There will even be an 11-foot blimp hovering in the rafters.

Big changes are coming for Admirals fans in what is arguably the most critical season for the franchise since it was founded in 1989:

The team is under new management for the first time since its inception.

Attendance sagged last season and the team suffered its first financial loss - more than $100,000.

A similar loss this season could endanger the franchise's future.

Last spring, Blake Cullen sold the team to local businessmen Mark Garcea and Page Johnson, who vowed to stem the decline.

``We need to turn things around,'' Johnson said. ``We think we're doing the things to attract a larger fan base. We'll know in a month or so if we've succeeded.''

Many of the changes fly in the face of the strategy employed by Cullen, who founded the franchise and made it thrive in a market that had been a minor league hockey graveyard.

He ran a traditional hockey franchise. Cullen eschewed mascots and clowns, promoted modestly and played conservative music during breaks in play. He wanted to sell the game, not lights and blimps.

Cullen's strategy worked for his first six seasons. The Admirals were an instant hit, winning championships in two of their first three seasons and regularly selling out Scope on Friday nights. They led minor league hockey in attendance in 1993, averaging 7,904 per game.

But last season, Cullen's seventh, the team drew 6,924 per game, down an average of more than 600 paid admissions from 1994-95. No-shows, rarely a problem in previous seasons, were notorious in the latter stages of last season.

Moreover, the team's on-the-ice fortunes have sagged. The Admirals have won only one playoff series in four years. Last season, the Admirals were ousted by Richmond 3-0 in the first round.

When they bought the team, Garcea and Johnson promised change, including a reduction in the team's budget. And cut they have. Every expenditure is scrutinized - officials must get three bids on even relatively small purchases.

The Admirals are looking at everything they can - except a ticket price hike - to increase revenue. Advertising rates were raised and advertising opportunities maximized. Fans will notice more ice logos, and even logos on players: Stihl Inc. of Virginia Beach has purchased the right to have its logo on the helmets and jerseys. The Admirals even will be offering their own credit card later this month.

Tens of thousands of dollars have been poured into a newspaper and radio advertising blitz that will carry through the winter. Games will be promoted with a frenzy, with everything from tonight's magnetic schedule night to ``wiener dog'' races later this winter.

Garcea and Johnson have eagerly courted the Admirals Boosters Club. They have attended meetings and offered to help the club on more fund-raising projects.

``They've been great to work with,'' said Nancy Franklin, booster club president.

The new owners also attempted to keep some familiar faces on board, signing head coach John Brophy to a two-year contract and promoting Al MacIsaac to general manager. Rod Taylor was signed as a player-assistant coach, and they attempted to retain the entire front-office staff.

``Blake had a great staff here,'' Garcea said. ``We simply wanted to enhance what he had done.''

The schedule this season will help. There are more Friday night games than ever - 20, including 11 in a row at one stretch - and only two home games in October, when attendance is usually at its worst.

Nonetheless, the Garcea-Johnson regime has suffered setbacks:

Season-ticket sales are down several hundred from last year's 3,600 in spite of increased promotions.

A promised move of the front office to a suburban location that would include a marquee to promote games to passers-by on Northampton Boulevard has been delayed, perhaps until the spring.

The team was forced to double what it spends to put games on the radio and thus raised rates for radio ads, which have been tougher to sell.

The new owners pledged to televise at least two games locally but so far have been unsuccessful in getting their team on the tube. ``It's just too expensive,'' Johnson said.

Then there was a public relations faux pas over the summer when longtime radio voice Pete Michaud quit rather than accept what he termed a ``substantial'' pay cut. Sources put the cut at about $3,000.

When Michaud went public with the dispute, many fans were outraged. Letters and phone calls supporting Michaud poured into the Admirals' office and local newspapers. Bumper stickers began appearing that said: ``Pete Michaud, the only voice of the Admirals.''

Fans who have left messages on the team's unofficial Internet home page appear dubious of the changes and the new ownership. Most are upset that Michaud is gone.

Nonetheless, a near-sellout is expected tonight at the 8,990-seat Scope. And if the Admirals win, business manager Brian Kelley figures the fans will keep coming.

``As I've looked back on statistics from previous years, it seems the success on the ice has mirrored the success in ticket sales,'' he said. ``I think it's very important to put a team on the ice that's a championship-caliber team. I think if you ask either coach if we have championship-caliber talent, they would say we do.''

So why all the bells and whistles? Do the Admirals truly need clowns and a light show to draw fans if winning solves everything?

``I think people come because they want to see a great hockey team play,'' Kelley said. ``At the same time, I think it's important for us to show the fans that we are interested in entertaining them from the minute they walk into Scope until the minute they leave Scope.

``I think they will be happy with a lot of the things we try.''

If fans aren't happy, he suggests they give him a call (640-1212) or fax him (640-8447).

``We're making some changes in the music,'' he said. ``We'll see how the fans react to it.

``We want to provide a fun, entertaining experience. If we change the music and the fans don't like it, we'll change again. We'll do anything we can within reason to accommodate their needs.''

Beginning tonight, fans can begin to judge for themselves if the new owners live up to that pledge.

And if they can stem the decline. ILLUSTRATION: Color photo on page C1 by PAUL AIKEN, The

Virginian-Pilot

Rod "The Rocket" Taylor returns to the ice for the Admirals as a

player/coach

Photo by CHRISTOPHER REDDICK, The Virginian-Pilot

"We need to turn things around," said Page Johnson, left, pictured

here with fellow Admirals owner Mark Garcea. "We think we're doing

the things to attract a larger fan base. We'll know in a month or so

if we've succeeded."

Graphic

1996-97 Schedule; Management; Player Roster; Year-By-Year Results

Graphic

JOHN BROPHY

HEAD COACH

Brophy enters his 23rd year of coaching, and eighth in Hampton

Roads, 14 victories short of his 800th career win. He is the

winningest ECHL coach with 254 career victories and led Hampton

Roads to championships in 1991 and 1992. Brophy came to Norfolk from

Toronto, where he was head coach of the Maple Leafs for two seasons.

The 63-year-old Nova Scotia native played 21 seasons in the minor

leagues, accumulating what is believed to be a career record 4,444

minutes. Brophy and his wife, Nancy Brophy-White, share a Virginia

Beach home with their dogs, Novie and Scotia.

AL MACISAAC

GENERAL MANAGER/ASST. COACH

MacIsaac, 28, is a graduate of St. Francis Xavier University in

his native Antigonish, Nova Scotia, where he was a star defenseman.

He played on three championship teams - in junior hockey, the AHL

and with the Admirals in 1991-92, when they won their last ECHL

championship. MacIsaac became Brophy's assistant coach in 1993 and

has been head coach of the Philadelphia Bulldogs of Roller Hockey

International the last two seasons. He was promoted to general

manager and assistant coach of the Admirals this past summer.

PLAYERS

MARC SELIGER

Position: Goaltender. Size: 5-11, 165.

Hometown: Rosenheim, Germany. Age: 22.

Seliger was drafted ninth in 1993 by the Washington Capitals and

played last season for Frankfurt of the German Hockey League,

posting a 3.56 goals-against average. Seliger was 0-3 with a 5.73

goals-against average in Portland before being sent to the Admirals

this week. The Bavarian - Rosenheim is just south of Munich - speaks

fluent English. He started for the German junior national team in

1994.

MIKE LARKIN

Position: Defenseman. Size: 6-3, 210

Hometown: Rutland, Vermont. Age: 23.

The University of Vermont graduate played 35 games for Lakeland,

Fla. of the Southern Hockey League last season, scoring five goals

with 34 assists and an eye-popping plus 41. He was called up late in

the season by Hampton Roads and had 12 points in just nine games.

The rugged defenseman is a lifelong Boston Bruins fan and a

connoisseur of Metallica and U2.

CHRIS PHELPS

Position: Defenseman. Size: 6-1, 200

Hometown: Shelby Township, Mich. Age: 23.

Phelps is a two-time ECHL All-Star who struggled with injuries

and the near-death of his infant daughter last season. Phelps and

his daughter are both healthy. He gained 15 pounds lifting weight in

the off-season. Phelps had 26 points in 45 games last season.

Assigned by Portland to the Admirals, the lifelong Detroit Red Wings

fan is a born-again Christian who is active in youth ministries.

ALEX ALEXEEV

Position: Defenseman. Size: 6-1, 216

Hometown: Kiev, Ukraine. Age: 21.

Alexeev could be the Admirals best defenseman. He was a two-time

all-star for Tacoma in the Western Hockey League before moving to

Portland last season, where he played in 30 games. Alexeev has

plenty of international experience. Raised in the capital city of

the Ukraine, Alexeev speaks fluent English and developed a

reputation in Portland as a locker room prankster.

JOEL THERIAULT

Position: Defenseman. Size: 6-3, 205

Hometown: Quebec. Age: 19.

Mr. T., as teammates call Theriault, is not afraid to drop his

gloves. He set a Canadian Hockey League record last year with

Drummondville of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League by compiling

573 penalty minutes. He had 389 penalty minutes the previous year.

When he's not riding his motorcycle, shooting pool, or listening to

White Zombie, Theriault peruses Stephen King novels.

ROB MACINNIS

Position: Defenseman. Size: 6-0, 200

Hometown: Port Hood, Nova Scotia. Age: 31.

MacInnis played for the Admirals two years ago, then played for

Utica of the Colonial League last season. He has extensive AHL

experience as well. He was a Roller Hockey International all-star

for the Philadelphia Bulldogs this past summer. The brother of St.

Louis Blues star Al MacInnis, Rob races cars, water skiis and plays

the guitar in his spare time.

RYAN MULHERN

Position: Left Wing. Size: 6-1, 198.

Hometown: Havertown, Pa. Age: 23.

The Brown University graduate was Ivy League Rookie of the Year

in 1993 and Player of the Year in 1995. He was recruited out of the

Philadelphia flyers camp by coach John Brophy, who says he has star

potential. He says the beaches and golf in Hampton Roads helped sway

him to play for the Admirals. He is also into waterskiing and

jetskiing.

DENIS LAMOUREUX

Position: Right Wing. Size: 6-0, 190.

Hometown: Montreal. Age: 21.

Lamoureux was perhaps the biggest surprise of training camp,

beating out established players such as Jeff Kostuch for a spot on

the team. He is a likely candidate to be scratched early in the year

(only 18 of 19 players can dress), but will get a strong test next

week on a five-game road trip. Lamoureux was player of the year for

Kanawaki in the Junior A Tier II League with 24 goals and 49 assists

in 46 games.

ANDY WEIDENBACH

Position: Center. Size: 5-8, 175.

Hometown: Allen Park, Mich. Age: 25.

Weidenbach one of the smallest but fastest players on the team.

The Yale graduate was an All-Ivy League choice in 1994-95 and played

in Sweden last season, where he was all-league with 24 goals and 25

assists in 35 games. An avid reader who recently devoured The

Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole, he is related to Jack

Weidenbach, the University of Michigan athletic director.

ROD TAYLOR

Position: Left Wing. Size: 5-10, 180

Hometown: Lake Orion, Mich. Age: 29

The Rocket, as he is known for his rocket-like shots, was

promoted to player-assistant coach this season, his sixth with the

team. He holds the franchise record for goals with 272 and needs 22

points to surpass the scoring record of Brian Martin (346). He was

the Admirals MVP the last two seasons. Taylor played college hockey

at Ferris State in his native Michigan, is an avid fisherman and

works hockey camps at Ferris State and Virginia Beach in the

offseason.

ALAIN SAVAGE

Position: Center. Size: 5-7, 190.

Hometown: Montreal. Age: 21.

Savage was recruited out of Cleveland's camp by coach John

Brophy. He was the top scorer in his junior league in 1994-95 with

55 goals and was named rookie of the year in the league four years

earlier. The Montreal native played last season for Ducs Angers in

France. Nicknamed Junior, Savage is an avid Montreal Canadians fan

who likes to rollerblade on the beach boardwalks.

RANDY PEARCE

Position: Center. Size: 6-0 198.

Hometown: Elmira, Ontario. Age: 26.

Pearce was the leading scorer for the Admirals' last championship

team in 1992 with 78 points. He returns after three years in the AHL

and IHL with Baltimore, Portland and Baltimore. He is a physical

player who rarely has an off game. Coach John Brophy said he should

be the team's best player. Pearce is married with an 8-month old

daughter.

CHAD ACKERMAN

Position: Defenseman. Size: 5-8, 190

Hometown: Rochester, Mich. Age: 23.

Ackerman was not expected to make the team, but impressed coaches

with his toughness and hustle in camp here and in Portland. Ackerman

was named the top defenseman at Bowling Green University and was an

honorable mention all-league choice. Nicknamed Barney, he plays

golf, racquetball and softball in the off season.

RICK KOWALSKY

Position: Right Wing. Size: 6-1, 195.

Hometown: Simcoe, Ontario. Age: 24.

Killer, as he is known by his teammates, was assigned to the

Admirals by Portland. He was an All-ECHL choice two years ago in

Hampton Roads but was felled by a broken wrist midway through last

season. He played on two Memorial Cup champions in Sault St. Marie

and played a season in Cornwall of the AHL. His father is the mayor

of Simcoe, Ontario.

DANIEL REJA

Position: Right Wing. Size: 6-1, 193.

Hometown: Toronto. Age: 20.

Reja was an eighth round draft choice of the Washington Capitals

in the 1994 entry draft. He played in Belleville and London of the

Ontario Hockey League the last two seasons. He was rookie of the

year in London, where he was a teammate of Jason Allison of the

Caps. Nicknamed Hollywood, he listens to The Clash and plays golf

and ping pong in his spare time.

SHAMUS GREGGA

Position: Goaltender. Size: 5-11, 185.

Hometown: Markham, Ontario. Age: 22.

Gregga was in goal for the Admirals when they clinched the East

Division title in 1994, but was released in each of the last two

seasons. He played last season in Wheeling and Cleveland of the IHL

and returns to Hampton Roads with 10 pounds of additional muscle.

Nicknamed Shamoo, Gregga enjoys jet skiing and listening to The

Black Crows in his spare time.

DOMINIC MALTAIS

Position: Right Wing. Size: 5-11, 190

Hometown: Boucherville, Quebec. Age: 24.

Maltais is the top returning scorer from last season with 63

points even though he missed 16 games with a broken wrist. He came

to the Admirals from Fort Worth of the Central League, where he

scored 149 points in two seasons. Nicknamed The Falcon, Maltais says

Mario Lemieux is his favorite NHL star. He enjoys golf and water

skiing.

JOEL POIRIER

Position: Right Wing. Size: 6-1, 190.

Hometown: Richmond Hills, Ontario. Age: 21.

Poirier has both size and quickness. He came to the Admirals late

last season from Portland and had 17 points in just nine games. He

played junior hockey in Ontario for the Sudbury Wolves and Windsor

Spitfires before going to Portland in 1995. He was a seventh round

draft pick of the Washington Capitals in 1993. Nicknamed Soup, he

says his favorite band is Tragically Hip.

AARON DOWNEY

Position: Right Wing. Size: 6-0, 205.

Hometown: Shelburne, Ontario. Age: 22.

Downey quickly established himself as one of the ECHL's fiercest

fighters last season, when he led the Admirals with 354 penalty

minutes. He also had 12 goals and 11 assists. He played junior

hockey in Halifax and Cole Harbor before coming to Norfolk last

season. Asked why he came to play for coach John Brophy, he said:

``You get to work hard here every day.''

DARRYL PAQUETTE

Position: Goaltender. Size: 5-11, 175

Hometown: Sudbury, Ontario

Age: 25

Paquette starred in goal for the Admirals last season, with a

7-2-5 record and a 3.06 goals-against average. He set the team

record last October for the most saves in a game with 49. He was

2-7-1 in Portland and figures to split time between the two teams

again this year. He was an all-star for the University of Cape

Breton and the team MVP. In his spare time he works with the

Children's Aid Society. by CNB