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James Dolan
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Stevo718
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7/21/2012  3:33 PM    LAST EDITED: 7/21/2012  3:36 PM
James L. Dolan (born 1956) serves as President and CEO of Cablevision Systems Corporation and Executive Chairman of Madison Square Garden, Inc.

Personal life
Family

Dolan is married and resides on Long Island with his wife Kristin. He is the son of Cablevision founder Charles Dolan and nephew of Cleveland Indians owner Larry Dolan. Dolan's two brothers, Patrick and Thomas, serve on Cablevision's Board of Directors.
Early life

After originally pursuing a career in music, Dolan eventually switched to a major in communications at SUNY New Paltz and began working for Cablevision in various capacities including sales before eventually being dispatched to Cleveland by his father to manage the launching of a sports radio station. In 1995 he was made CEO of Cablevision.
Drug and alcohol abuse

Throughout his early adult life Dolan battled drug and alcohol problems and was reportedly known for having a volatile temper. In 1993 he was sent to drug rehabilitation at the Hazelden clinic in Center City, Minnesota.
[1]
Recreational

Dolan performs blues-inspired rock as the singer for JD & The Straight Shot and is also an avid sailor.

Business management

Dolan was an ardent opponent of his father's proposed Voom satellite service, which became a polarizing controversy among Cablevision's Board of Directors. While supporters argued Voom could propel Cablevision into the future emerging satellite market and a wider customer base, opponents of the plan, including James Dolan, argued it was too expensive with no expense relief for the foreseeable future. In the end, the younger Dolan prevailed and Voom was shut down. This was an instrumental event in Dolan emerging from his father's shadow, albeit reluctantly, as a viable businessman.[2]

However, his business career has not been without failures, which include purchasing the failing Wiz electronics and entertainment chain which ended up posting losses of $250 million before being liquidated and the Clearview Cinemas chain which has failed to generate any significant revenue.[3]
Sports management

In 1994, Paramount Communications, the owner of Madison Square Garden, was acquired by Viacom, who in turn sold the MSG properties to Cablevision and ITT Corporation, which had 50% ownership each. ITT sold its share to Cablevision three years later.

In 1999, Dolan was given an increased role in managing Cablevision's sports properties and is now the primary manager of these assets. The teams under his domain include most notably the National Basketball Association's New York Knicks, the National Hockey League's New York Rangers, the Women's National Basketball Association's New York Liberty, and the American Hockey League's Connecticut Whale.

As Chairman of Madison Square Garden, he supervises day-to-day operations of its professional sports teams and regional sports networks, which include MSG Network and MSG Plus. He also serves as a governor of the Knicks and Rangers to their respective leagues.
Controversies
NY Rangers

After winning the Stanley Cup in 1994, the Rangers saw a decline in performance in the wake of Dolan's increased role in managing the team and failed to make the playoffs from the 1997-1998 season until the 2004–05 NHL lockout, despite leading the league in payroll in most of those years. This was the longest playoff drought in the franchise's history, in part due to questionable, expensive free-agent signings, such as Eric Lindros, Pavel Bure, and Theo Fleury. Despite fan and media calls for the team's general manager Glen Sather to be fired for the organization's shortcomings, Sather was retained. However, since the resolution of the NHL lockout in 2005, Dolan has allowed Sather rebuild from the ground up, which has led to a revivial of the club and the organization, culminating with a trip to the Eastern Confernce finals in 2012, their first since 1997. However, when Dolan guaranteed a Stanley Cup Finals appearance for his team in January 2012, Rangers head coach John Tortorella took issue with his remarks. "I have my owner up here talking about a Stanley Cup. That's a bunch of bull****," Tortorella said in response. "We need to take it one game at a time."[4]
NY Knicks

Like the Rangers, the Knicks performed abysmally in the early 2000s and have yet to recover, which fans mostly blame on Dolan's management missteps. Although the Knicks made the NBA Finals in 1999, they have not posted a winning season until the 2010-2011 season. Furthermore, the Knicks had not made the playoffs from the 2003-2004 season to the 2010-2011 season, which both ended in first round four game sweeps for the Knicks. Dolan has come under fire from many Knicks' fans for the teams run of consecutive losing seasons from 2001-2002 to 2009-2010. Numerous media[who?] and informal fan polls, including a recent Sports Illustrated poll, have ranked Dolan the worst owner in the NBA.[5] In 2007, NBA Commissioner David Stern criticized Dolan's management of the Knicks, saying "they're not a model of intelligent management."[6][7] One widely criticized decision was to give shooting guard Allan Houston a 6-year, $100 million maximum contract in 2001, when no other team had offered Houston more than $75 million. Houston retired due to injury after just four seasons and with over $40 million remaining on his contract.

In 2003, Dolan hired Isiah Thomas as Team President of Basketball Operations and General Manager to replace embattled executive Scott Layden. Thomas made aggressive moves to re-tool and upgrade the Knicks roster through trades, the NBA Draft, and free agency. Despite the talent Thomas imported, the team did not perform up to expectations and Thomas was often the target of the frustration of Knick fans; Dolan was also on the receiving end of the ire of Knicks' fans for his commitment to Thomas' in spite of Thomas' sometimes questionable decisions.

After the 2004-2005 season, the Knicks signed head coach Larry Brown to a 5 year, $50 million contract. After just one (losing) season, Brown was fired and the team bought-out Brown's contract for $18 million. Brown walked away with a total of $28 million for coaching the Knicks for just one year.

After firing Larry Brown, Isiah Thomas assumed the duties of being the head coach of the Knicks. During a staged interview on MSG Network, which is the last time Dolan answered questions from the media, Dolan gave Thomas an ultimatum to show "evident progress" or potentially be fired. In the latter half of the 2006-2007 season, with the Knicks within reach of a playoff spot, Dolan signed Thomas to a multi-year contract extension. The team subsequently fell out of contention and Dolan was castigated in many quarters for his extension of Thomas' contract. The next season, Dolan stripped Thomas of his front office duties because Thomas had taken the Knicks to the playoffs just once during his tenure. New team President Donnie Walsh removed Thomas as head coach upon the conclusion of the season.

Other coaches that also had short-lived tenures as head coaches of the Knicks include Don Chaney (2001–2003) and Lenny Wilkens (2003–2005). Like Thomas and Brown, they remained on the Knicks' payroll following their departure from the bench due to multi-year contracts signed with the owner (and in Chaney's case, 2 separate contract extensions).

In 2007, Dolan was named as a defendant in a sexual harassment lawsuit submitted by a former Knicks executive, Anucha Browne-Sanders. Browne-Sanders accused Dolan of firing her out of spite after she complained about sexual harassment from Isiah Thomas. The court ruled in favor of Brown-Sanders and Dolan had to pay $3 million of the $11 million settlement. MSG was responsible for paying the remainder of the settlement.

In July 2012, Dolan faced criticism for allowing popular Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin to sign with the Houston Rockets without matching their $25.1 million offer.[9]
Media policies

Dolan rarely speaks with members of the media and communicates to the press through released statements or in interviews with MSG Network. In 2000, Dolan instituted media training for all Garden employees who might deal with the press and instituted an ironclad rule against team personnel criticizing others in the organization via the media.[10] Under Dolan's watch MSG implemented controversial media policies limiting access to players. Some of these measures included prohibiting reporters and Knicks' beat writers from interviewing players without an MSG public relations official present, forbidding one-on-one interviews, and excommunicating writers who write articles critical of the organization. The policies also forbid the MSG Network from being critical of the Knicks and the Rangers, regardless of their performance. Such measures were not standard practice for other NBA teams.[11] In addition, the Knicks did not make their medical staff available to the press.[12] In 2004, longtime broadcaster Marv Albert's contract was not renewed by MSG Network, allegedly because of his criticism of the Knicks' play.

What a coincidence 1999 was when he had a major role in the sports aspect of the business and also the last time we made any noise in the playoffs.

James Dolan and Kim Jong-il (deceased dictator of North Korea) actually have a lot of similarities... both inherited their situations, massive egos, and manipulate their media outlets.

AUTOADVERT
JamesKPolk
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7/21/2012  3:51 PM
An article from 2005 about Dolan:

http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/features/11545/

It's sad that he actually got even worse in the subsequent years. The man in a complete tool. He's only 56. We still have another 20 years of him at the least.

"Peace, plenty, and contentment reign throughout our borders, and our beloved country presents a sublime moral spectacle to the world." - James K Polk
subzero0
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7/21/2012  4:38 PM    LAST EDITED: 7/21/2012  4:39 PM
Dolan is a big problem, just ask ex-play by play man Marv Albert. How many people have to be fired by Dolan before he understands they are not the problem?

I am a fan of the Knicks but have a rapidly growing hatred for Dolan. For the first time this summer though, my hate for Dolan is starting to eclipse my love for the Knicks. I find myself talking more and more about the other team in NY now.

This article also pretty much hits the nail on the head when it comes to Dolan's antics in this Jeremy Lin thing. The whole move was to serve a personal vendetta. It wasnt what was best for the fans, not whats best for the players, not even whats best for the team. It was all about revenge for himself.

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/ny-knicks-letting-jeremy-lin-houston-a-business-move-james-dolan-personal-article-1.1119199?localLinksEnabled=false

All these years the Knicks have been firing gm's, team presidents, coaches, trading and waiving players to try to find the problem. The problem is not the gm's, team presidents, coaches or players. The problem is, and always has been, the owner. Too bad he cant be fired, because that really is the only solution.

VCoug
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7/21/2012  5:13 PM
Now the joy of my world is in Zion How beautiful if nothing more Than to wait at Zion's door I've never been in love like this before Now let me pray to keep you from The perils that will surely come
Elite
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7/21/2012  5:30 PM
when we finally DO WIN a championship i still might puke having to see that slug hold our trophy up
JamesKPolk
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7/21/2012  5:34 PM
Elite wrote:when we finally DO WIN a championship i still might puke having to see that slug hold our trophy up

If we ever do win under his ownership (highly doubtful) it will be in spite of him and not because of him.

"Peace, plenty, and contentment reign throughout our borders, and our beloved country presents a sublime moral spectacle to the world." - James K Polk
ramtour420
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Russian Federation
7/21/2012  6:59 PM
Elite wrote:when we finally DO WIN a championship i still might puke having to see that slug hold our trophy up

Knicks will never win a championship with Dolan at the helm. The one thing that was giving him an edge was spending$. That only applies to stupid players, however.

Everything you have ever wanted is on the other side of fear- George Adair
James Dolan

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