Dear National Hockey League (NHL),
Since I was young child, I played hockey, collected hockey cards, wore your branded pajamas, owned a Guy Lafleur lunch box, watched many games and whenever fate smiled upon me, went to the famous Montreal Forum to watch my beloved Montreal Canadiens play. My father, a dedicated CBC employee for over 35 years, allowed us to watch two Canadian shows as children: The Nature of Things and Hockey Night in Canada.
I took my wife to her first NHL game in Montreal and it was a special moment as the team captain, Saku Koivu, had returned to the lineup after being treated for cancer. The incredible standing ovation he received from the fans still gives me the chills.
Years later when we relocated to Toronto, I read my kids The Hockey Sweater by Roch Carrier, bought all of them Canadiens jerseys since we now resided deep behind enemy lines within Leafs Nation, and made annual pilgrimages to Montreal to watch the Canadiens play. When my eldest child was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes and feeling understandably down, she received a personalized, very supportive, confidence boosting email from Rejean Houle, President of the Canadiens Alumni. You can imagine how that solidified her conviction to the team.
Fast forward to the present. Over a week has passed since the NHL lockout ended. Teams are starting training camps, players are getting traded and general managers are getting fired. Everything is back to normal, right?
Despite all the aforementioned sentimental stories, I regret to inform you that, as a long-customer, I must now evaluate our relationship from a business perspective in terms of ROI (return on investment).
So please consider this a performance review for your benefit. Looking back since 1993 here are the facts, as I understand them. As a business:

When the season abruptly stopped this year, I invested that time in my family and business. Instead of spending three hours watching a game, I went skating with my family, read books to my kids, discovered new ideas for clients and friends plus giving back to those in need. The return on my time has been much better personally and professionally.
It's also a misnomer that you (NHL) represents hockey. Hockey is about parents who wake up early in the morning to take their kids to play games and name their family dog Bauer; about people like Matthew Hallett who volunteer as coaches and scouts; and about people like Ian Cobb who billeted players for years to help groom them to be better players and upstanding members of society.
The bottom line is that you are a business, not a sport and if I look at our relationship from a strictly business perspective, the ROI has been lousy lately.
The silver lining to the lockout is that I've discovered more important things to spend my time and money on. For that, I thank you; however, I'm still pressing pause as a customer at least for the remainder of this year.
For those other customers (i.e. fans) who do come back to you, I hope you don't reward their loyalty with more ticket hikes and lockouts in the future. They deserve better. You need to see a negative impact to your bottom line so you don't repeat this foolishness. Otherwise, your actions won't ever change but if Major League Baseball can learn then anything is possible.
I'll be carefully watching how you conduct yourself as a business moving forward and re-evaluate our relationship at that time. It's now your move.
Game on.
Cheers,
Sulemaan
Follow Sulemaan Ahmed on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sulemaan
What scares most owners however is that if they ever dropped all seats to all games to no more than $5, their attendance would barely increase if at all.
I recently imagined where the best place in the country to live would be if a person loved the big 4 team sports and loved going to games but absolutely did not want any part of the corrupt world of modern pro team sports (so did not want to root for any pro teams in the nhl, nba, nfl or mlb).
The best area I could think of was Syracuse NY where a sports fan would have a AAA baseball team, an AHL hockey team plus Syracuse football and basketball to be a fan of.
Do you know of any other area in the country that's similar?