Re: Illinois to D1
So I’ve really be trying to hunt over the web for rumors of the University of Illinois getting a NCAA division 1 team. Their ACHA team has been good for quite some time. People have always mentioned rumors of how they were likely to upgrade the program, largely due to the success of the team I’d imagine. I found a pretty interesting plotline that may have also contributed to those rumors. Forgive the long post as I was taking notes as I tracked all this info down. Plenty of links for anyone who really wants to dig into the story as well.
The Danville Wings were in the NAHL from 1993 through 2003. Lou Mervis was the owner and Josh Mervis was the GM. They upgraded for the 03-04 season to the USHL.
July 2003 Blagojevich signs the Downstate Sports Facility Act, which would allow interested townships to sell bonds for the purposes of building arenas then tax local hotels to recoup the investment. Mervis is interested in relocating the Wings to Champaign with a newly built arena.
7/23/2003 - Blagojevich signs 2 bills in visit to UI
The Wings struggle to make a profit. In June 2003 Lou Mervis was helping to push the idea of building a new ice arena on the south end of Champaign / Urbana to be a new home for his USHL team. The arena was supposed to seat 4,000 as well as be a multiuse facility for conferences. This was planning that was taking place due to pending legislation in IL that would help offset costs with a hotel tax.
6/8/2003 - Convention center, ice rinks on drawing board
In the fall of 2003 – Early momentum builds to investigate putting a new ice arena in Champaign. The first article talks to lack of ice time and possible financial challenges. The second talks more about forming a task force to tackle the project.
9/14/2003 - Tough sell looms for new ice rinks
11/20/2003 - Ice rink, center issues to be explored
In April 2004 current owner of the Wings, Lou Mervis, sold the franchise to Paul Skjodt who moved them to Indianapolis. Mervis cited $500,000 operating loss. Attendance per the league policy was supposed to be 1,600 but the Wings only averaged 964. Skjodt became the new owner and Josh Mervis stayed on in his current role as GM. The franchise became known as the Indianapolis Ice.
4/20/2004 - Wings relocating to Indianapolis
By May 2004, the financial planning has been dragging on. U of I is willing to donate land and cover a small amount of cost, but Champaign and Urbana argue over who covers what expenses and who is likely to see increased revenue due to hotel / conference related revenue. Mervis has purchased another USHL franchise and still wants to put a USHL team in Champaign.
1/29/2004 - New ice arena has funding gap
5/5/2004 - Funding plans for ice rink detailed
As of March 2005 the project still hasn’t died. The rink was part of the overall Research Park development process, but U of I decides to split this out as its own project. New development sites are looked at.
3/4/2005 - Proposed ice arena could end up in Urbana
I lose track here. I couldn’t find any new progress about putting a large arena in Champaign. I assume that the finances stayed deadlocked and interest just died out for the most part.
February 2010 it’s announced that Muskegon will be an expansion franchise in the USHL owned and operated by the Mervis family. “We spent a lot of time and effort exploring multiple cities that would be a solid USHL market, but Muskegon clearly established itself as not only the right fit for us, but for the League,” said Josh Mervis. No kidding. Even Mervis gives up hope and moves on...
2/16/2010 - USHL Expands to Muskegon, Michigan for 2010-11
As of June 2011, the developers of the Research Park are still interested in an ice rink, but in this article it’s really more of an afterthought.
6/2/2011 - Deere, iCyt plan expansion in new phase of UI Research Park
So while this story isn’t directly related to U of I getting a team, had this worked out I can only imagine they would have. With an arena in place it would have been operating costs, scholarships, and balancing Title IX. No small act, but the biggest hurdle would have been out of the way. The arena wouldn’t have been as large as other Big 10 teams, but something is better than nothing, right?