Detroit Wheels In an era of experimentation in sports leagues, the
Detroit Wheels were a football team that played in the
World Football League for the 1974 season. Ilitch was part of a 33-person consortium (including Motown singer
Marvin Gaye) that funded the ill-fated WFL team which would not even last the inaugural season in the start-up league.
Detroit Caesars The
Detroit Caesars were a professional softball team that began play in the
American Professional Slow Pitch Softball League (APSPL) in 1977. The team disbanded after the 1979 season. Prior to formalized professional play, a major sponsor of amateur softball in the Detroit area was Little Caesars, who sponsored the 1970
American Softball Association national championship team. With the formation of a professional league, Ilitch formed a team in his first solo step into professional sports ownership. The Caesars played at Memorial Field in
East Detroit and featured former Detroit Tiger stars
Jim Northrup,
Mickey Stanley,
Jim Price and
Norm Cash, along with established softball players such as Mike Nye, Ronnie Ford, Mike Gouin, Bert Smith, and Tex Collins. The team was led by manager Gary Vitto, earning the team two championships before disbanding after the 1979 season.
Detroit Red Wings In 1982, Ilitch purchased the Detroit Red Wings from Bruce Norris for US$8 million. Over the next two decades, Detroit returned to perennial playoff contention, winning the
Stanley Cup in 1997, 1998, 2002, and 2008 and appearing in the Finals three times between the 1994–95 and 1997–98 seasons. The Red Wings added two more championships in 2002 and 2008. Prior to the
2004–05 NHL lockout,
Forbes magazine ranked the Red Wings as the fifth-most valuable franchise in the NHL, despite a $16 million operating loss. For the 2007–2008 hockey season, the team won the President's Trophy for the best record in the NHL for the sixth time—the most of any NHL team since the President's Trophy was introduced in 1985–1986. The Red Wings made the playoffs for 25 consecutive seasons through 2015–2016. The 25 consecutive playoff berths were the longest active streak of post-season appearances in all of the North American professional sports, before ending in the 2016–2017 season. It is tied for third all-time in NHL history after 29
consecutive appearances by the
Boston Bruins from 1967–1968 to 1995–1996, 28 consecutive trips by the
Chicago Blackhawks from 1969–1970 through 1996–1997, and is tied with the 25 consecutive appearances by the
St. Louis Blues from 1979–1980 to 2003–2004.
Detroit Tigers Ilitch purchased the Detroit Tigers in
1992 from fellow pizza magnate
Tom Monaghan, the founder of
Domino's Pizza. Under his ownership, the Tigers logged losing records in twelve out of thirteen seasons before their turnaround in
2006. After acquiring the team, Ilitch expressed interest in moving the struggling team to a new ballpark. In 2000, his expectations were realized when the team moved from
Tiger Stadium into the newly built
Comerica Park. He financed approximately 60% of the $350 million facility; the taxpayers of the greater Detroit-
Wayne County and federal grants covered the balance. Various Ilitch Holdings, Inc. enterprises manage and operate Comerica Park and its concessions. In 2005, the Detroit Tigers hosted
MLB's 76th All-Star Game at Comerica Park. When the Tigers won the AL
Wild Card under
manager Jim Leyland and general manager
Dave Dombrowski in 2006, they made the playoffs for the first time since
1987. They also reached the World Series for the first time since
1984, but the Tigers eventually lost in five games to the
St. Louis Cardinals in the
World Series. After Dombrowski was brought in, Ilitch steadily agreed to bring in marquee free agents and finance a larger payroll, with the Tigers beginning the
2008 season as one of the highest-salaried teams in baseball. On September 16, 2011, the Tigers won the
Central division title—their first division crown since Ilitch's purchase. On January 24, 2012, Ilitch signed
Prince Fielder to a nine-year, $214 million contract, the fourth-largest contract in baseball history. The
2012 Tigers went all the way to the
World Series, but were swept by the
San Francisco Giants. Prior to the 2013 season, Ilitch agreed to sign
starting pitcher Justin Verlander to a seven-year, $180 million contract extension, at the time the highest single offer ever tendered to a major league pitcher. The Tigers won four consecutive AL Central Division titles between 2011 and 2014, but Ilitch's quest for a World Series title was not achieved before his death in 2017.
Detroit Drive Ilitch was one of the early team owners in the
Arena Football League, starting up the
Detroit Drive in 1988. The Drive were one of the most successful teams in the early days of the AFL, both on and off the field. They generally had strong attendance, and the Drive were in the
ArenaBowl in every year of their six-year existence, going 4–2 in the title games. After Ilitch bought the Tigers in 1992 though, he decided he didn't want to own another franchise that would take away fans from the Tigers, so he sold the team and they moved to
Worcester, Massachusetts.
Awards and honors • Inducted into the
Hockey Hall of Fame (builder) in 2003 and the
United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004. • Presented with the key to the City of Detroit in February 2008. ==Philanthropy==