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'Feeling of emptiness' for Warriors' fans

Craig Musgrove, a season-ticket holder, says losing BCHL team will leave a void in West Âé¶¹AV
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The West Âé¶¹AV Warriors days at Royal LePage Place may soon be coming to an end.

Craig Musgrove is a self-described ‘d¾±±ð³ó²¹°ù»å’ fan of the B.C. Hockey ³¢±ð²¹²µ³Ü±ð’s West Âé¶¹AV Warriors.

So when news broke this week that the club would likely be leaving West Âé¶¹AV at the end of the current season, Musgrove was, to say the least, distraught.

“T³ó¾±²õ has been difficult, the Warriors were very personal for ³¾±ð,†said Musgrove, a season-ticket holder for °Â²¹°ù°ù¾±´Ç°ù²õ’ games at Royal LePage Place since 2010.

â€Àá³Ù’s been a meeting place, a social event where a lot of people with the same interests get together. Those things alone will be missed.

“The hockey, of course, the players, the people in the ´Ç°ù²µ²¹²Ô¾±³ú²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô,†added Musgrove, “t³ó±ð²â all become part of your life.

“T³ó±ð°ù±ð’s just a real feeling of emptiness right ²Ô´Ç·É.â€

If all unfolds as expected, the Warriors will be headed to North ¶Ù±ð±ô³Ù²¹â€™s Sungod Arena for the start of the 2017-18 season.

°Â²¹°ù°ù¾±´Ç°ù²õ’ owner Mark Cheyne has signed a letter of intent to transfer ownership of the club to a Delta businessman, with the move subject to approval by the ±ô±ð²¹²µ³Ü±ð’s board of governors.

A money-losing venture since moving to West Âé¶¹AV from Langley in 2006, Cheyne took over sole ownership of the club in 2009.

With an last season, Cheyne hoped the ³¦±ô³Ü²ú’s financial fortunes would finally take a turn for the better.

But with community support for the team and attendance remaining stagnant this season, Cheyne said the writing was on the wall.

“W±ð were never even close to breaking even once and after awhile ¾±³Ù’s just no fun ²¹²Ô²â³¾´Ç°ù±ð,†Cheyne said. “T³ó±ð last few years, you look for that light at the end of the tunnel, and when we won it all last year, we hoped that would be it.

â€Àá was told once you get by Vernon, once you get by Penticton, once you win something big, ¾±³Ù’l±ô turn ²¹°ù´Ç³Ü²Ô»å,†Cheyne added. “B³Ü³Ù the light at the end never ³¦²¹³¾±ð.â€

Cheyne, who moved with his family to West Âé¶¹AV in 2007, said the decision to pull up the ³Ù±ð²¹³¾â€™s stakes came with considerable soul searching.

â€Àát was »å¾±´Ú´Ú¾±³¦³Ü±ô³Ù,†said Cheyne, “a long, hard decision. It hurts me and I know some people will be hurt this. But ³Ù³ó±ð°ù±ð’s not much else we can put into ¾±³Ù.â€

For Craig Musgrove, the Warriors were the centrepiece of his ´Ú²¹³¾¾±±ô²â’s winter calendar and he wishes more could have been done to keep the club in West Âé¶¹AV.

But Musgrove also understands the financial realities of operating a junior A franchise.

â€Àá ³¦²¹²Ô’t hold anything against Mark °Ú°ä³ó±ð²â²Ô±ð±Õ,†he said. â€Ô¨´Ç³Ü ³¦²¹²Ô’t keep operating at a loss like that. Everybody knows BCHL teams »å´Ç²Ô’t make money.

â€Àát was great, cheap entertainment for the fans, ¾±³Ù’s really too bad they have to ²µ´Ç.â€

If the sale goes through, the Warriors will leave Musgrove and hundreds of other devoted fans with some fond memories, thanks largely to last ²õ±ð²¹²õ´Ç²Ô’s magical run to a Canadian junior A championship.

“T³ó±ð day they finally beat Penticton, that was one of the happiest days I can °ù±ð³¾±ð³¾²ú±ð°ù,†he said. “T³ó±ðn they went on a tear, won the Fred Page Cup, they won in Estevan, and then they took care of things in Lloydminster [RBC Cup].

"It was incredible what that team did, it was great to be along for the ride. °Õ³ó±ð²â’l±ô leave us with some great ³¾±ð³¾´Ç°ù¾±±ð²õ.â€

And Musgrove vows he will be there right to the end, cheering on the Warriors to their last second on the ice at Royal LePage Place.

“F´Ç°ù me, that last game will feel like a »å¾±²õ²¹²õ³Ù±ð°ù,†Musgrove said. “A really big piece of West Âé¶¹AV is going to be missing and ³Ù³ó²¹³Ù’s going to be ³Ù´Ç³Ü²µ³ó.â€

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