Charles Wang, Former New York Islanders Owner, Dies at 74
He was not on the list.
Charles Wang, a technology company founder and former owner
of the New York Islanders hockey team, died Sunday. He was 74.
Wang died in Oyster Bay, New York, said his attorney John
McEntee in an emailed statement. A cause of death was not disclosed.
Wang “was an entrepreneur, visionary, author, and
philanthropist but will be remembered most affectionately by those who knew him
for his love of life, family, and friends,” McEntee said in his statement.
He bought the Islanders in 2000 along with Sanjay Kumar,
then the president of Computer Associates International, which Wang founded in
1976. He later bought out Kumar’s stake in 2004. Kumar pleaded guilty in an
accounting fraud scandal at the company in 2006 and served a prison term.
At the time of the Islanders purchase, Wang told The New
York Times, “We want to make the New York Islanders the world-class sports
franchise that our community deserves, wants and needs.”
Wang had attended only one hockey game before buying the
team for almost $190 million, McEntee said.
But in 2009, he told Newsday he regretted buying the
money-losing team, saying, “If I had the chance, I wouldn’t do it again.”
Wang announced in 2014 that he was selling the team to a
group of investors, and it took effect in 2016. Since then, he had been a
minority co-owner.
The team left Long Island in 2015 and played in Brooklyn. It
will begin splitting games between the two locales later this season.
“Charles Wang was a great man,” Islanders President and
General Manager Lou Lamoriello said in an online statement. “He always spoke of
his love for the Long Island community and the passionate fan base. Long Island
would not have a team if it were not for Charles.”
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman issued a statement praising
Wang for his efforts to expand hockey in China. Wang created Project Hope, an
international program that took ice hockey to China.
“As the NHL embarks on a journey to grow hockey in China, we
do so with the appreciation and knowledge that it was Charles who was the
vision and driving force at the forefront of developing the game in his native
country,” Bettman said.
Wang was born in Shanghai and moved to the United States
with his family as a child.
He founded Computer Associates, now called CA Technologies,
and was chairman and CEO until 2000. A 2007 report by the company’s board
blamed Wang in connection to the accounting fraud scandal, but Wang called the
report “fallacious” and blamed Kumar. He was never charged in the scandal.
Survivors include his wife, children, mother and brothers.
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