|

Bob Andelman
Bio
Hotbot
Search
"By Bob Andelman"
Northern
Light Search
"By
Bob Andelman"
Guru.com
Hiring Information
for Bob Andelman
Order
Books
By Bob Andelman
Andelman
Archives
Articles
Books
Reviews

Stadium For Rent
Hey, Kids!!!
Big
Black Spider With
the
Orange Orange Eyes
Mr. Media Archives
The
Latest
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
The Andelmans
Bob
Mimi
Rachel
Write To Us!
Bob
Mimi
Rachel

(Since Oct. 7, 1999)
|
|
Bob Andelman Articles Archive
Cornelia Corbett
Owner of the Tampa Bay Rowdies
Profile By Bob Andelman
(Originally published in Florida Business/Tampa
Bay, 1989)
Before her, Cornelia Corbett's team, the Tampa Bay Rowdies.
Behind her, a few thousand exuberant soccer fans who haven't
given up the dream.
There isn't much to cheer on this overcast Sunday night at Tampa
Stadium except that the rain has stopped. Despite the Rowdies
having advanced to this American Soccer League playoff game against
the Boston Bolts, only 5,000 people have come out to support
the team. Even their loudest screams echo as but a whisper in
the cavernous bowl, where 67,000 seats both end zones and the
entire north side of the field are empty. Even the concession
stands are against the Rowdies tonight; they ran out of hot dogs
before halftime.
Still, Cornelia Corbett is unswayed. Watching the entire game
in her now familiar position on one end of the bench beside head
coach/general manager Rodney Marsh, the owner of the Rowdies
concentrates her energies on the field. She winces each time
the Bolts score and claps enthusiastically when the Rowdies engineer
an elegant pass or steal.
The Rowdies are down two games to none after losing two straight
in Boston. This game is their last gasp and before the night
is over, they will have choked, 2-1.
Despite all these clouds, there are rays of sunlight for the
oft battered Rowdies. Their regular season record was 12 wins
and 8 losses, up from 10-10 in 1988. They won their division.
An average home attendance of 5,792 was actually tops in the
two-season-old American Soccer League. And while the team may
lose up to $200,000 for its fiscal year (overhead from the off-season
includes a reduced office staff, soccer clinics for youngsters,
player tryouts, travel and league work), it actually showed a
small profit of $10,000 during the team's 20-game season.
That's why Cornelia Corbett is smiling.
"I think we're making headway," she says. "Our
losses aren't as bad this year as last. It's a minute swing:
it's possible we could make $150,000 and it's possible we could
lose $150,000."
Corbett doesn't know that the Rowdies ever made money not under
founder George Strawbridge in the North American Soccer League
(NASL), nor under the ownership troika of Stella Thayer, Bob
Blanchard and Cornelia's husband, Dick Corbett. In the heady
years of the NASL, when Marsh was a star player, Gordon Jago
was coach and a coterie of international stars electrified the
league's games on national TV, the Rowdies averaged 28,000 fans
at Tampa Stadium. There was tremendous overhead associated with
that success. But it's a level Cornelia Corbett would like to
reach. "I can't imagine drawing an average of 28,000 and
losing money," she says.
Sportswoman, socialite, businesswoman, wife, mother of four who
is Cornelia Corbett?
"She's a mover and a shaker in our sport," says Colin
Phipps, owner of the Orlando Lions ASL team. "The average
sports enthusiast sometimes gets enamored of the sport and forgets
the practicality. She understands both."
"She understands sports, which is a major plus for any owner,"
says Rodney Marsh.
Born in Manhattan in 1946 to a "well-to-do" family
(she'll say only that her father is in "investments,"
her mother owns racehorses and Cornelia herself has "private
income"), Corbett earned a degree from New York University
(Washington Square) in history. As soon as she graduated though,
"Cornie" as friends and family call her went west to
teach skiing in Aspen. She met Dick there in '68 and returned
with him to New York City. They married two years later.
The honeymoon was exotic and long three months of hiking and
wandering through Tibet, Nepal, Kamandu and the Himalayas. "The
two of us slept in mud huts with the Nepalese," remembers
Dick. "We traveled with nothing but the clothes on our backs
and two sleeping bags. That trip showed she was a great outdoors
lady. Leaving Manhattan, she was comfortable sleeping in a mud
hut next to a campfire, crawling up and down the Himalayan range.
She was a doer and great fun to be with."
As her husband made his first million in real estate (see sidebar),
Cornelia spent three years as a case officer investigating abuse
and neglect for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Children. "It was interesting and pretty gruesome,"
she recalls. When their first child was born in '73, it was time
for a career change. "I could no longer be objective,"
says Cornelia. "I couldn't do case work. Every child became
my own."
The Corbetts met on the ski slopes, but Dick himself a former
light-weight amateur boxer with a nose broken in six places to
prove it introduced Cornelia to golf and, of course, she's been
playing ever since. They take family vacations to hunt or go
white-water rafting in Colorado, climbing in the Grand Canyon
and camping with Wild Kingdom TV host Jim Fowler (he is godfather
to one of their children). The couple is "simpatico,"
says Cornelia, very upbeat.
If an impression of Cornelia Corbett as ultimate sportswoman
is being formed, it's not incorrect. "I've been a sports
nut all my life," she says. "If I have been consistent
in one thing in my life, it's my love of sports and competition."
Cornelia and Dick moved to Tampa in 1978. In 1984, when the NASL
went under, Dick Corbett's partners in the Rowdies, Stella Thayer
and Bob Blanchard, decided to bow out as well. They didn't know
where soccer was going if anywhere and lacked the spirit and
time to continue. Dick and Cornelia toughed it out although the
team has nowhere to play in '85. In '86, Dick made his wife sole
owner.
"As he has done many times in the past," recalls Cornelia,
"he said, 'Do you want to see what you can do with it?'"
No hesitation; she said yes.
Corbett had worked in the Rowdies front office during the last
NASL season, so she knew the makeup of the business. The game
itself was close enough to field hockey which she played competitively
from grade school through college to assure her of competency
in the finer points of soccer gamesmanship. And, most of all,
she is not a woman to shirk from a challenge. When Dick needed
someone to supervise a brownstone gutting and renovation in New
York City back in the early days, he turned to Cornelia to bring
in estimates and run roughshod over the crews. When he was in-between
general managers at the old Hall of Fame Inn, Cornelia effortlessly
handled the job.
"I've stepped into gaps for him a lot of times as a caretaker,"
she says matter-of-factly.
In the case of the Tampa Bay Rowdies though, what Corbett inherited
from her husband was very little. A familiar nickname, one that
was once synonymous with having a good time. A somewhat tired
Irish melody and phrase "The Rowdies arrrrrreee .... a kick
in the grass!" Westshore offices in need of repair and a
fresh coat of paint. Those were just the peripherals: the team
itself had disintegrated with the league. There were no players,
no coach. And no league to play in.
Desperate and choiceless, Corbett entered the Rowdies in the
American Indoor Soccer League. The team played indoors at the
Bayfront Center Arena. Despite a 21-21 record and a playoff berth,
fans knew this was not the old kick-in-the-grass and they stayed
away in droves.
The 1987 season was the first to offer promise to soccer fans.
Corbett entered the Rowdies in the start-up American Soccer League
(ASL) and quickly found herself the Grand Dame of the game, having
had as much or more experience than most of the other owners
in the 10-team league. She was called upon for opinions and rose
immediately to the league's executive board. The Rowdies' first
season in the ASL was a flat 10-10, but the team led the league
in attendance.
Rodney Marsh runs the game side of the Rowdies; Cornelia Corbett
handles the business. She says, contrary to public opinion, husband
Dick is completely out of the team's operations.
Finding a woman running a professional sports franchise is still
unusual. Marsh says male team owners around the league found
they had quite a capable associate in Corbett, however someone
who knew their business better than they themselves did.
"There are a lot of ethnic owners in soccer and many of
the meetings get personal," he explains. "She comes
in with a very cold, calculated, detail-oriented business concept.
They were a little overpowered by that."
Linda Powell, director of operations for the American Soccer
League, says Corbett has earned the respect of her counterparts.
"She's been in the sport longer than most of the owners,"
according to Powell. "She is very concerned that the franchises
run professionally and that her colleagues also run their franchises
professionally." Corbett was chair of the league's marketing
committee at one point and currently sits on the executive committee.
"Our club is as professional an organization as you can
have," reiterates Marsh. "We are in the lead at everything
we do, whether it's player salaries, medical care, uniforms,
stadium and travel arrangements. It's a real first-class organization."
A first-class organization maybe, but operating on a shoestring.
Corbett runs a very lean operation. In-season, the Rowdies only
have 10 full-time employees. The league has a player salary cap
of approximately $75,000 an average of $250 per game, per player
which controls costs and quality. Many players have second jobs
which sometimes interfere with practices and even games, but
in a nickel-and-dime league, the Rowdies cope.
Off-season, players receive no pay and the administrative staff
is reduced to a bare bones four. "We've got a lot of people
who are very loyal," according to Corbett. "Our receptionist,
Pat, has been with the team since 1975. Every August (when the
soccer season ends) she says, 'See you in January.'"
To reduce stadium costs, Corbett has explored playing in a smaller
facility. A more intimate, contained facility would also boost
morale and give the impression of fewer empty seats. The Florida
Suncoast Dome has been discussed, partly because soccer youth
leagues and Rowdies fan support has always been greater in Pinellas
County than Hillsborough, but the team has objections to the
artificial turf planned there.
ASL administrator Powell says none of the teams in the ASL are
profitable yet.
"We told people when they came in: Don't expect a profit
in two years," she says. "One of the goals of the league
is to keep losses minimal. This is a growth industry; we are
still growing. There is going to need to be an upgrading where
we can pay players a living wage and keep them with the teams.
Then we can build them up within the community."
When the Rowdies were a bigger deal to the Tampa Bay sports public,
the team began a commitment to building soccer in the community
through youth leagues and summer camps. While times are tough
now for the professional team, amateur soccer in the Bay area
is thriving so the Rowdies have maintained their efforts with
teen-agers. By operating clinics for the kids featuring Rowdies
players and by offering deeply discounted season tickets to youth
soccer league members, the team hopes to develop a new generation
of loyal fans who will grow with the Tampa Bay entry in the ASL.
"We've instituted a program where, when kids join their
league, we offer them a $10 season pass that will allow kids
to get in for $1 a game," says Cornelia Corbett. "We
are trying to reach out and give the benefit to the kids who
play the game. We're working closely with all the youth leagues."
The athlete in Corbett sympathizes with Tampa Bay area youths
who need more places to play amateur soccer.
"The need for fields in unbelievable," she says. "Your
senior divisions can rarely find fields to play on. I get discouraged
the United States has more soccer players than any other country,
more than England, Brazi, Argentina, Germany. And yet the facilities
aren't there. In Tampa Bay alone there's 20,000 kids playing
the game. To me, politically, you multiply that by moms and dads,
that's quite a political force."
Donna Salzer is administrator of the Florida Suncoast Soccer
League and state registrar for senior division soccer players.
She thinks Corbett's vision of a brighter day for soccer in this
country is accurate.
"The group born in the '60s is going to make soccer American,"
says Salzer. "When they have children, they will grow up
with soccer. I'm close to 50. Our generation didn't get introduced
to soccer until their 30s. My son is 21 he's played for 15 years.
He goes to all the Rowdies games and can relate to it. We have
to allow these kids to grow up. Soccer is going to catch on."
As Corbett and the entire league waits for the next generation
of fans to mature, they are faced with other stumbling blocks
before the American public can be expected to open its arms to
this very European sport. Soccer needs television exposure and
knowledgeable, colorful announcers to bring it to life and explain
the nuances. A likely merger with the Western Soccer League in
1992 could create new media opportunities. But this is a low-scoring
game so fans need to be trained to appreciate the action and
defense. And there is nothing like an eclectic, talented player
to add a little zing to the field of play. Pele brought it from
Brazil and Franz Beckenbauer brought it from Germany to the old
NASL. The Rowdies of old had three players Marsh, Tatu and recently
retired Steve Wegerle who could charge up a crowd.
None of this is news to Corbett or Marsh, of course.
"It's a Catch-22," says the team owner. "Soccer
will not succeed without mass media. Media will not get involved
until there's 10,000 people in the stands.
"I also think the quality of the product (was better) in
the late '70s," she continues. "We had a lot of Europeans
coming over. Now you can only play two visa players. I know how
fickle the American fan is it would be lovely to have a charismatic
hero. I never saw Rodney play but I did see Tatu. Tatu did terrific
things and he would score. You can play to the crowd when you
can back it up with ability. I just don't think we have Americans
with the personality and confidence to do that."
"You have no argument from me," says Marsh. "For
any sport to succeed, the quality has to be there. What is quality?
Star players."
Marsh also notes the inconsistency that has developed in fan
support between the Rowdies and Tampa Bay Bucanneers football
team.
"We had a seven-game winning streak a team record. We ended
12 and 8 and we still had 5,000 people. If the Bucs did that,
they'd have 72,000 people in the stands. We need to have a winning
season to maintain our crowd. The Bucs need to have an ordinary
season to improve their crowd.
"At the end of the day," concludes a hopeful Marsh,
"soccer in this country will be enormous. Staggering. But
whether or not that will be in my lifetime, I don't know."
There are precious few women in ownership positions with professional
sports franchises. Cornelia Corbett is one; Marge Schott of the
baseball Cincinnati Reds and Georgia Frontiere of the football
Los Angeles Rams are the only others.
You can bet neither Frontiere or Schott is working indefinitely
without salary or income from their teams as Corbett does.
Equally as rare in professional sports are owners who watch their
teams compete from the players' bench the way Corbett does. Home
or away, her players know she's going to be seated beside them
from the opening buzzer 'til time runs out.
"It is very difficult to be in an owner's box when family
is there and you're entertaining guests and friends to really
be able to watch the game without offending someone," according
to Corbett. "Also, I find for me you're quite removed when
you're high up. I prefer to be close-up. Corbett arrives at Tampa
Stadium for 8 p.m. home games by 6:30 p.m. She'll check in on
the owner's skybox, the V.I.P. and media boxes. Then she tours
the stadium, checks the placement of sponsor banners on the field
and visits the entrance gates for a fix on attendance. Last stop
is the visiting team's lockerroom. "If there's any trouble-shooting
or decision-making to be done, I'm available," she says.
"But by ten of eight game time I move down to the field."
She says that sitting on the bench evolved from road trips with
the team. "Where else are you going to sit and totally concentrate?"
It would be every armchair quarterback's in this case, armchair
goalie's dream to sit on the bench of a favorite team and shout
encouragement and advice. Corbett knows she walks a fine line
between being a knowledgeable, influential fan and being considered
an interfering, know-nothing, rhymes-with-rich.
"You have to restrain yourself," she says. "I
don't think it's the owner's place to be coaching, making comments,
or trying to second-guess your coach."
During the Rowdies-Bolts playoff game, Coach Marsh frequently
whispers to Corbett, who sits beside him, describing finer points
of the action or simply expressing his frustration. After just
a few minutes of observing the two, it becomes obvious that just
because he is seated beside his boss and a lady at that, Marsh
and his players do not weigh the invectives they sometimes spew
at referees and players.
"The players on this team have shown enormous respect by
treating her the same way they'd treat anyone else," says
Marsh. "It's almost like she wasn't there; they treat it
normal. I'm pleased they do that. I'd hate for them to be looking
over their shoulders."
'
Close quarters during the heat of battle has helped Corbett come
up to speed on the game of soccer and given Marsh the full confidence
of the boss. The two from all appearances share a mutual trust
and working relationship. It's also a teacher/pupil relationship
at times, with Marsh the teacher, Corbett the pupil.
"Over the last three years," confirms Marsh, "she's
really digested a helluva lot. Her understanding is very complete."
"I ask Rodney to keep me informed about players, but as
general manager, he makes those decisions," explains Corbett.
"We might discuss it so I understand his reasoning, but
it's never to overrule him. It'd be pretty stupid of me to second-guess
Rodney Marsh. There's a very clear delineation. He knows me well
enough to know when I ask a question, I'm not questioning him,
I'm looking for information. After two seasons, I don't ask as
many questions as I used to. I've come to understand how he thinks
and the quality a certain player brings."
There must be less stress-inducing things a bright, active woman
like Cornelia Corbett could do besides operating a money-losing,
under-attended soccer team, right?
"I love it," she answers defiantly. "How can you
not love it? You're involved with something you love to do, sports.
And steep it with a firm business policy. For two hours on a
Saturday or Sunday, I have the passion that sports take. But
Monday through Friday, during business hours, it runs as a business."
How Florida's Pro Soccer Teams
Fare
Team, '88 home attendance, '89 home
attendance
Tampa Bay Rowdies, 55,130; 57,922*
Ft. Lauderdale Strykers, 53,580; 43,073
Orlando Lions, 27,100; 27,614
Miami Sharks, 11,620; 8,164
* Tampa Bay holds the single-game attendance record, 19,211,
on July 4, 1989.
Statistics provided by the American Soccer League.
Sidebar:
Dick Corett's International Dream
Development deals can take a long time to work out. There's land
acquisition, financing, permiting, sales and marketing. Not to
mention 95 percent luck.
Even so, Dick Corbett's International Plaza a 135-acre, mixed-use
project planned at the intersection of Westshore Blvd. and Columbus
Drive near Tampa International Airport has been a long time coming.
First announced in 1983, the property received its DRI in 1985.
Corbett has made little visible progress since, except for demolishing
the Hall of Fame Inn, which was once on the site.
"It's moving more slowly than I would like, frankly, because
of the softness of the office and hotel market," he says.
"You'd like things to happen tomorrow. Developers would
like things to happen today. But the frustrations of the permiting
process in the state of Florida requires a lot of patience.
He says the speed of development is about to shift to a higher
gear.
"My first step was to build off-site roads," according
to Corbett, who describes the current $4-million widening of
Spruce Street/Columbus Drive as a joint effort between the city,
state, Metropolitan Insurance and International Plaza. "Patience
and prudence has been a good policy in this case because the
off-site roads should be completed first so you have good access.
This is an example of good planning. Once roads are in place,
things will happen quickly."
Construction will be completed in March; around that time Corbett
expects to break ground for interior site work. Build-out is
expected to be fully completed by 1997.
Building in Tampa is nothing like what Corbett was used to after
two decades in the Manhattan real estate business. "It's
not at all the way it was when I was in New York, where things
would happen quickly," he says. "You would make decisions
and have things done within 12 months. There you had tax abatement,
tax incentives. The city would offer developers incentives to
build. They helped make business happen. It was a strong, pro-business
attitude."
Dick Corbett has had what many would call a charmed life of being
in the right place at the right time, meeting the right people
and saying the right things.
He was president of his senior class at Notre Dame in 1960, the
spring presidential candidates John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon,
President Dwight Eisenhower and a future pope all spoke to students.
Corbett says he was fortunate to meet and introduce all four
"it was an incredible year." Kennedy had the most powerful
affect. Corbett changed his career plans, joined JFK's campaign
and was a manager based in Chicago.
Kennedy's November victory brought a young Corbett into the White
House to work in congressional relations. He helped pre-screen
other potential political appointments. While this was an education
in and of itself, he decided to return to school in 1962 and
earned an MBA at Harvard.
With a no doubt impressive Rolodex of contacts and an equally
impressive resume, Corbett found a position with Joseph P. Kennedy
Enterprises in Manhattan. He spent a decade with the Kennedys,
buying and selling real estate, making more contacts and setting
up lucrative deals for himself on the side. During that time
he hit the campaign trail with Robert F. Kennedy; "I was
eight feet away from RFK when he was shot," says Corbett,
pausing. "At that point, I left politics."
Corbett says he left Harvard in '64 with $5,000 in debt. Six
years later, through shrewd real estate deals, his net worth
was several million dollars. -- Bob Andelman
©2000, All rights
reserved. No portion may be reproduced without the express written
permission of the author.
PROFILES
FIRST
PERSON
LATEST
WORK
Free Andelmania E-Newsletter!
Want to hear the latest about the Andelmans? Join
our mailing list!
You'll get updates about the family and professional news, too.
Enter your email address below, then click the 'Join List' button:
You can order any of Bob's books from Amazon.com by
clicking on the icon below. His latest book, The
Corporate Athlete: How to Achieve Maximal Performance in Business
and Life, (John Wiley & Sons) written with Jack Groppel,
Ph.D., is now in stores.


These books are also available as audiotapes :
|