OT: Great concept - power to fire the GM
Posted: Wed Jan 16, 2008 6:48 pm
Saw Drew Carey on the Late Late Show last night and saw that he apparently is going to be part owner of the MLS soccer franchise in Seattle and they're adopting a VE-RY interesting concept. For $1,500 you can become a member of the franchise. As such, you have a vote to keep or dump the GM at set periods (thought he said every 4 years). What an idea! The club makes money off it and you, as a club member, have as close a taste of ownership as you're going to get. How do we get the Bulls on this plan ?
Looked up the article below today for legitimacy purposes :
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/otherspor ... occ13.html
With the Arsenal-Reading game as a TV backdrop, Carey announced Monday that his involvement with the Seattle MLS club would mean a unique approach to running the team.
First, Carey wanted to allow fans to buy memberships that would allow them to, among other things, vote on the fate of the team's general manager.
"If you don't like the job he's doing, if he doesn't have a winning team, if you don't like the product, if you don't think the hot dogs taste good when you go to the stadium, you can just vote him out," Carey said, with co-owner and general manager Adrian Hanauer grinning in the background.
"We're not afraid to let the fans have the power," Carey added.
Saw Drew Carey on the Barcelona and Real Madrid in Spain and Atletico Barboa in El Salvador institute this democratic system and were Carey's inspiration. He even became a member of Barcelona after a recent European trip.
"I went to Europe and saw how Barcelona's organization was structured; I thought we should have that in America," said Carey, 49, a Cleveland native who became a soccer fan after attending an MLS game in Los Angeles and has been active in pursuit of a soccer fix all around the world ever since.
"No other fans in the United States will have the chance to do what Seattle soccer fans will be able to do," he said.
Looked up the article below today for legitimacy purposes :
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/otherspor ... occ13.html
With the Arsenal-Reading game as a TV backdrop, Carey announced Monday that his involvement with the Seattle MLS club would mean a unique approach to running the team.
First, Carey wanted to allow fans to buy memberships that would allow them to, among other things, vote on the fate of the team's general manager.
"If you don't like the job he's doing, if he doesn't have a winning team, if you don't like the product, if you don't think the hot dogs taste good when you go to the stadium, you can just vote him out," Carey said, with co-owner and general manager Adrian Hanauer grinning in the background.
"We're not afraid to let the fans have the power," Carey added.
Saw Drew Carey on the Barcelona and Real Madrid in Spain and Atletico Barboa in El Salvador institute this democratic system and were Carey's inspiration. He even became a member of Barcelona after a recent European trip.
"I went to Europe and saw how Barcelona's organization was structured; I thought we should have that in America," said Carey, 49, a Cleveland native who became a soccer fan after attending an MLS game in Los Angeles and has been active in pursuit of a soccer fix all around the world ever since.
"No other fans in the United States will have the chance to do what Seattle soccer fans will be able to do," he said.