Norman Green

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Born (1934-06-12) 12 June 1934 (age 91)
OccupationsShopping mall developer, and ice hockey team owner.
KnownforMoving the Atlanta Flames to Calgary
Moving the Minnesota North Stars to Dallas
SpouseKelly Green
Norman Green
Born (1934-06-12) 12 June 1934 (age 91)
OccupationsShopping mall developer, and ice hockey team owner.
Known forMoving the Atlanta Flames to Calgary
Moving the Minnesota North Stars to Dallas
SpouseKelly Green

Norman Neil Green (born 12 June 1934)[1] is a shopping mall developer and owner from Calgary, Alberta. He was an original director and one of the principal investors in Sage Telecom, a private, telecommunications company operating in eleven US states.[citation needed] He was also chairman and sole owner of Stewart, Green Properties Ltd., which owned a group of private companies specializing in the development and management of major shopping centers in Canada and the U.S., owning and operating approximately 5,000,000 square feet (460,000 m2) of commercial real estate. The former owner of the Minnesota North Stars franchise, he was a member of the National Hockey League Board of Governors from 1979 to 1996, serving on all of its strategic committees.[2]

In 1979, Green joined Harley Hotchkiss, Norman Kwong, Ralph Scurfield, B.J. Seaman, and Doc Seaman in buying the Atlanta Flames of the National Hockey League and moving them to Calgary as the Calgary Flames.[3] His name was etched on the Stanley Cup when the Flames won it in 1989.

At the NHL's request, Green sold his stock in the Flames and bought the Minnesota North Stars in 1990 from George and Gordon Gund.[1] He was the owner of the North Stars who made the decision to move the team to Dallas in 1993 despite the team making a Cinderella run to the Stanley Cup Final in 1991.[4] In 1993, he moved the North Stars to Dallas, citing poor attendance in Minnesota, and the team became rechristened as the Dallas Stars.[5]

Two years later in December 1995, amid financial problems stemming from his business ventures outside of hockey, Green was forced to sell the Dallas Stars to Tom Hicks, with the sale closing in early 1996.[6] When the Stars won the Stanley Cup in 1999, Hicks sent Green a championship ring in honor of his services to the franchise.[7]

Green was chairman of the Calgary Chamber of Commerce in 1977 and renovated the former Oddfellows Temple that would become the Chamber's new home.[8] and of the Hockey Hall of Fame historical building in downtown Toronto in 1997.

Controversy

Other ventures

References

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