Hockey

Anthony LeBlanc leaves Halifax CFL group to take executive role with Senators

The Ottawa Senators have named Anthony LeBlanc as their president of business operations. LeBlanc was most recently a founding partner of Schooner Sports and Entertainment, a group trying to bring a CFL team to Halifax.

Former BlackBerry VP, Coyotes president takes over business operations in Ottawa

Anthony LeBlanc, a founding partner of a group trying to bring the CFL to Halifax, left that role on Monday to become president of business operations with the Ottawa Senators. (Ron Ward/The Canadian Press)

The Ottawa Senators have named Anthony LeBlanc as their president of business operations.

LeBlanc was most recently a founding partner of Schooner Sports and Entertainment, a group trying to bring a CFL team to Halifax.

He served as president, chief executive officer and alternate governor of the Arizona Coyotes from 2013 to 2017. Prior to joining the Coyotes, LeBlanc was vice president of global sales for Canadian tech company BlackBerry Limited.

The Senators announced LeBlanc's hiring around six weeks after former CEO Jim Little was fired. Little spent less than two months on the job.

The Senators said Little was fired due to behaviour "inconsistent" with the core values of the team and the NHL, but Little said the reasons for his dismissal were the result of a heated disagreement between himself and team owner Eugene Melnyk.

Schooner Sports and Entertainment said Monday that it remains committed to bringing a CFL expansion franchise to Halifax, and a person with knowledge of the situation told The Canadian Press that LeBlanc will remain with the group in a smaller role.

"We would like to congratulate Anthony LeBlanc on his new position with the Ottawa Senators," the organization said in a statement. "Schooner Sport and Entertainment's [SSE] partners have always owned or held leadership roles in businesses and sports organizations throughout North America in addition to SSE.

"SSE remains committed to developing a community stadium in Halifax and bringing the CFL's 10th franchise to Atlantic Canada. Another of SSE's founding partners, Gary Drummond, will assume the group's lead spokesperson role moving forward."

CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie wasn't immediately available for comment. Last month he said he reached out to officials with Schooner Sports and Entertainment to re-iterate his vision of having the Atlantic Schooners on board to make the league a truly national entity.

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