Ed Snider
Ed Snider (1933-2016) was a Philadelphia sports and entertainment executive who founded the Philadelphia Flyers, built the Spectrum and Wells Fargo Center, and created Comcast Spectacor into one of America's largest sports and entertainment companies. He transformed Philadelphia's sports industry by bringing the NHL to the city, constructing venues that hosted generations of events, and developing the business model that linked arenas with the teams that played in them. Other cities would copy what he'd built. His five-decade commitment to Philadelphia made him one of the most significant figures in the city's sports history.[1]
Building the Flyers
Edward Malcolm Snider was born on January 6, 1933, in Washington, D.C. Before he got into sports ownership, he'd worked with Edge Records and the Philadelphia Eagles. In 1966, he acquired an NHL expansion franchise for $2 million. Professional hockey came to Philadelphia. The Flyers became the city's most successful sports franchise, a position they'd hold for decades. Snider demanded competitive excellence and he wasn't afraid to spend what success required. That standard, established early, set a bar that other Philadelphia teams sometimes struggled to reach.[2]
He built the Spectrum in 1967. Just sixteen months to completion, meeting the NHL's deadline. The arena would host Philadelphia sports and entertainment for nearly four decades after it opened. Fans loved the building for its design, sightlines, and atmosphere. Its eventual demolition felt like losing something irreplaceable. Snider grasped something others didn't: arenas needed year-round programming beyond sports games to stay profitable. That insight drove his booking practices and kept the Spectrum financially healthy even when the teams weren't performing well.[1]
The Flyers' success under his ownership proved his approach worked. Two Stanley Cup championships in 1974 and 1975. Consistent playoff appearances across decades. He hired Fred Shero as coach and assembled the "Broad Street Bullies" teams that defined Philadelphia hockey. The orange and black colors, the Kate Smith recording of "God Bless America," the blue-collar playing style. These became what Philadelphia hockey meant, what his franchise represented.[2]
Comcast Spectacor
In 1996, Snider merged with Comcast Corporation to create Comcast Spectacor, combining his arena and team holdings with Comcast's resources. They built the Wells Fargo Center to replace the Spectrum. The new arena hosted the Flyers, 76ers, and major events. Despite Comcast's majority ownership, Snider kept leading the sports division, staying personally involved the way his career had always demanded.[1]
His expansion beyond the Flyers included the 76ers, arena management companies, and entertainment ventures. He created an integrated model that linked venue ownership with team operation and event programming. His investment in Comcast SportsNet (now NBC Sports Philadelphia) extended his influence into broadcast. Other cities looked at what he'd built and restructured their own sports and entertainment enterprises to match it. Philadelphia's opportunities to relocate or sell to out-of-town interests came and went, but he kept his operations rooted in the city.[2]
The Snider Hockey program offered something different: free ice hockey opportunities for youth in underserved Philadelphia neighborhoods. It grew to serve thousands of children across multiple facilities. That extended his involvement far beyond professional sports into community development. His philanthropic activities, major donations to educational and cultural institutions, distributed the resources his enterprises had generated. It all reflected something genuine about his commitment to the city.[1]
Legacy
Ed Snider died on April 11, 2016. The Flyers hosted a memorial at the Wells Fargo Center, and it showed how much Philadelphia fans cared about their owner. He'd built a franchise. He'd constructed venues. He'd pioneered a business model for integrating sports and entertainment operations. His fifty-year commitment to Philadelphia made him one of the city's most significant sports figures. What Snider showed was what sports entrepreneurship could achieve when paired with genuine commitment to competitive excellence and community engagement.[2]