Crain's Cleveland Business

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VOL. 37, NO. 39

SEPTEMBER 26 - OCTOBER 2, 2016

Source Lunch

Business of Life BrewBoat brings party to the local waterways. Page 29

CLEVELAND BUSINESS

Heather Roszczyk says entrepreneurial scene in Akron is on rise. Page 30 MANUFACTURING

The region’s wealthiest suburbs Page 35

By KEVIN KLEPS

SPORTS BUSINESS Schulman takes long Tribe’s playoff view after run is driving tough time sales for 2017

kkleps@crain.com @KevinKleps

A

By DAN SHINGLER dshingler@crain.com @DanShingler

There are basically two roads forward for the Fairlawn-based plastic compound maker A. Schulman, according to analysts who follow the company. One is likely long and leads to an independent future, where the company regains its stock value with its own earnings and, Gingo perhaps, again becomes an acquirer of other companies. The other leads to Schulman being purchased itself, by a private equity firm or maybe even a competitor. CEO Joe Gingo is putting on boots for the longer slog, though even he concedes the ultimate choice of routes might not be his to make. Gingo, who was brought back to the helm in August to right the Schulman ship, said he will unveil a fiveyear plan to investors later this year, with the backing of a third-party adviser to check and vouch for his numbers and projections. The company announced on Sept. 13 that Citi will be in that role. Gingo said he knows bringing in an outside adviser adds to speculation that the company could be sold, but said he needs the credibility such a firm can bring. SEE SCHULMAN, PAGE 17

The List

Francisco Lindor and the Indians are poised to win their first division title since 2007. (Ken Blaze for Crain’s)

s the final three home games of the regular season approached on Friday, Sept. 23, the Indians were headed for a fifth consecutive season with an average attendance that fell short of 20,000. The Tribe’s playoff run in 2016, however, already is making an impact on the club’s 2017 gate numbers. Tim Salcer, the club’s senior director of ticket sales and service, said the Indians have sold the equivalent of 600 full season tickets (FSEs in professional sports lingo) since Aug. 1. From Sept. 12-18, when the Indians’ chances of making their first postWild-Card appearance since 2007 became a near-formality, the club sold more than 200 FSEs. “It has not stopped since the (14game) winning streak in June,” Salcer said. “It has been extremely intense from then on.” The Indians have long thought that pumping up their season-ticket base was one of the most critical steps they could take to improve their attendance, which has ranked in the bottom three of Major League Baseball each year since 2011 and hasn’t been among the top 20 clubs since 2002. In 2008, when the Tribe was coming off a trip to the American SEE TRIBE, PAGE 34

FINANCE

Key is eyeing opportunities in Eastern Ohio By JEREMY NOBILE jnobile@crain.com @JeremyNobile

KeyBank’s recent move outlining an Eastern Ohio market centered on Akron and naming fresh leadership to direct it is a power play underscoring the bank’s goal of dominating business there. The timing is certainly notable.

Entire contents © 2016 by Crain Communications Inc.

Key announced its Eastern Ohio market president, Tim Burke, earlier this month, in the wake of FirstMerit Bank — the only regional bank to be headquartered in Akron — dissolving into Huntington Bank through those institutions’ recent merger. Deals of this size, in which Huntington absorbed FirstMerit’s more than $25 billion in assets and a customer base that makes it the largest deposit-holder in Ohio, create a de-

gree of volatility that spells opportunity for other companies to capitalize on shakeups by grabbing customers and bankers alike. And, in this case, it was that very shakeup that supplied Key with some of the leadership for this newly delineated market segment just outside its Cleveland home base, where Huntington is closing the gap on Key’s Northeast Ohio market share. Burke comes to Key from FirstMer-

it, where he was the regional CEO for the bank’s Central Ohio market. Reporting to him is another fresh hire in Eric Dellapina, Key’s head of commercial banking for the same market. Dellapina previously worked at FirstMerit as president of its Canton and Western Pennsylvania markets. And with them is familiar company in Lucia Pileggi, a KeyBank veteran who will continue to lead the SEE KEY, PAGE 7

Who to Watch in Law They come from big firms, small firms, nonprofits and local companies. Here are 10 people shaking up the region’s legal scene. Pages 19-27


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