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In addition to his duties at the
Hockeytown Café, Hospitality Services alumnus Dan Linnen
helps to serve up events at the Fox Theatre, Joe Louis Arena and
Comerica Park in his role as senior director of Olympia Entertainment.
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It
was Saturday, May 1, 1993, and Dan Linnen (B’88) was working
at Ripples, the bar he co-owned in Big Rapids.
The singer
for the band he regularly booked was getting upset. Nikolai Borschevsky
of the Toronto Maple Leafs had just scored his first career playoff
goal at 2:35 of overtime to beat the Detroit Red Wings in the seventh
and deciding game of the Stanley cup semi-finals.
“I
said, ‘Man I’m a fan too, but don’t get so upset,’”
Linnen says, remembering that fateful evening.
“But
you don’t understand,” the singer said to Linnen. “My
dad is going to be really upset.”
“Why?
Is he a big fan?” Linnen asked.
“No,”
the singer answered. “He owns the team.”
Which is
the beginning of how Linnen came to be senior director of Olympia
Entertainment, a position that involves managing Hockeytown Café—a
sports-themed bar and restaurant in downtown Detroit—as well
as events at the Fox Theatre, Joe Louis Arena and Comerica Park.
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| ATANAS
That
singer was Atanas Ilich, son of Mike Ilitch—founder of Little
Caesar’s Pizza and owner of the Detroit Tigers and Red Wings,
the Fox Theatre, Cobo Hall and many other properties in downtown
Detroit.
“He
had his own band called ‘Atanas,’ and he toured the
country along with his day-time gig of being, at that time, president
of Olympia Entertainments,” Linnen remembers. “I don’t
know how he did it.”
“He’d
get out of work on Friday and zip up to Big Rapids. He’d
have an advance crew set up all his gear and he’d show up
and sing. When he’d pull up in his little silver Porsche
I’d think, ‘Geez, we’re only paying this guy
$500; something’s got to be going on.’”
That
contact with the younger Ilich was the impetus for Linnen to make
the move from Big Rapids to downtown Detroit, where he seems right
at home at the reception desk of Hockeytown Café surrounded
by such Red Wings’ memorabilia as signed jerseys and publicity
photos.
“We’re
doing a renovation of Joe Louis Arena and we’re going to
install those original lockers right here on the mezzanine level,” Linnen says, giving his easy smile.
FROM CONCEPT TO REALITY
Comerica
Park is across the street from Hockeytown Cafés’ generous plate-glass front windows, with Ford Field just one block
over. Fox Theatre is right next door. Downtown Detroit, after
years of losing residents and financial and political power to
the suburbs, seems to be on the rebound.
“When
I first came down here to work, there was nothing across the street,”
Linnen remembers. “Hockeytown Café was formerly an
Italian restaurant that was active maybe three or four nights
a week when there were shows. Now we have the two new fields,
and Fox Theatre was the number-one grossing theatre in the country
for the first six months of 2002.”
Linnen
gives great credit to Mike Ilich for his vision in leading the
business community’s return to downtown Detroit. But even
Ilich was leery of Linnen’s ideas for the direction the
former Italian restaurant should take.
“The
primary responsibility of my job is to develop restaurant and
bar concepts,” Linnen says. “When I first pitched
the concept of Hockeytown Café, he was skeptical, but he
let me work up the idea. We traveled around the country to look
at sports-related restaurants like ESPN Zone and Champs. From
there we hired an architect to do some conceptual designs and
ultimately moved ahead. Three years later, everyone’s happy
we did.”
IF THE SKATE FITS
Linnen’s
Ferris State degree in hospitality management and his background
in running his own businesses make him a perfect candidate to
manage a restaurant, but specifically Hockeytown Café?
“I
played youth hockey while growing up in Big Rapids,” Linnen
says. “My father (Ferris State Professor of Mathematics
John Linnen) started the Big Rapids Area Hockey Association. When
I went to college, my father helped organize the first club team
up there, which he also coached. We had a lot of fun with that.
I’m still in touch with friends who played professionally
both here and over in Europe.”
Other
aspects of the job have required Linnen to discover new skills
altogether.
“I’m
not a real estate person, but when it came time to go out and
find tenants Mike Ilich gave me that freedom—although people
probably thought he was out of his mind,” Linnen says. “We
were able to get a couple of tenants in here when I began, which
at the time was a pretty tricky thing. Back then we didn’t
have anyone fielding phone calls. Now we have someone just answering
calls about our various properties. People are sensing the energy
in downtown Detroit.”
The
logo of Mike Ilich’s Detroit Red Wings is much in evidence
at Hockeytown Café. Given the positive changes taking place
in downtown Detroit, those wings sprouting from a spoked-wheel
just might be an appropriate symbol for the city as a whole. After
all, until the Tigers or the Lions bring home a world championship,
this is Hockeytown. |