Champion Air
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Champion Air | ||
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IATA MG |
ICAO CCP |
Callsign CHAMPION AIR |
Founded | 1995 | |
Ceased operations | May 31, 2008 | |
Hubs | Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport | |
Secondary hubs | Denver International Airport McCarran International Airport (Las Vegas) |
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Focus cities | Lambert-St. Louis International Airport Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport |
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Fleet size | 16 | |
Destinations | 8 | |
Parent company | Grand Holdings Inc | |
Headquarters | Bloomington, Minnesota, USA | |
Key people | ||
Website: http://www.championair.com |
Champion Air was an airline based in Bloomington, Minnesota, USA. It operated general charter services to sports teams, vacation wholesalers and government agencies. Its main base was Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, with hubs at Denver International Airport, Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, and Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City. The airline ceased all operations on May 31, 2008. [1]
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[edit] History
In 1987, MGM Grand Air (IATA: MG, ICAO: MGM, and Callsign: Grand Air), a charter airline owned by MGM MIRAGE,[2] with a focus on operating VIP charters with luxurious aircraft, was established, starting operations in September 1987. Operating Douglas DC-8 and Boeing 727 aircraft in lavish configurations, MGM Grand Air operated charter service as well as scheduled service between Los Angeles International Airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York using aircraft with an all first class configuration.
By 1994, with business jets being the latest fad for celebrities and business leaders, MGM Grand Air was no longer profitable, and the company sought to sell it off. The buyer was Front Page Tours, a small tour operator based in Edina, Minnesota dedicated to providing airlift to sports teams and their fans to major sporting events. The air operator's certificate was purchased from MGM Grand Air in July 1995. The name was changed to Champion Air and the fleet was standardized on the Boeing 727.
In March 1997, Minnesota Twins owner Carl Pohlad and Northwest Airlines acquired the company from Richard Page. The airline relocated to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where it shared facilities and resources with Northwest, and replaced Sun Country Airlines as the leading charter operator for Northwest-owned MLT Vacations. In 2003, five Champion Air executives completed a management buy-out to take control of the airline. The airline continued to operate both VIP and general charters for MLT and other operators.
However, as of late summer 2007, Champion Air management was informed that MLT passengers would be moved from Champion Air to Northwest's own flights throughout the 2008 year. This was a significant blow to Champion Air, as MLT Vacations accounted for roughly 75-80% of all operations. In January 2008, it was disclosed that Champion's contract to provide charter flights for 13 National Basketball Association teams would also be taken over by Northwest, which had hired several Champion Air pilots in the preceding months.[3]
On March 31, 2008, Champion President and CEO Lee Steele announced that "the company will cease all flight operations as of May 31, 2008." He cited high fuel costs and the fuel inefficiency of their aging and thirsty Boeing 727-200 as some of the major reasons behind the shutdown. "Our business model is no longer viable in a world of $110 oil, a struggling economy and rapidly changing demand for our services" The carrier will not be filing bankruptcy.[4]
The airline is wholly owned by Champion Air Management[5] and has 737 employees (at January 2005).
[edit] Fleet
As of March 2007 the Champion Air fleet included [5] :
- 6 Boeing 727-200 Advanced aircraft equipped with 56 Business Class Seating
- 10 Boeing 727-200 Advanced aircraft equipped with all Coach Class Seating
[edit] Trivia
- The entire Boeing 727 fleet is former Northwest Airlines aircraft[citation needed], the very same company they lost most of the contracts to.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ Champion Air to Cease Flight Operations May 31st. Yahoo.com (2008). Retrieved on 2008-03-31.
- ^ Nevada Gaming Abstract - MGM MIRAGE Company Profile. Retrieved on 2007-03-26.
- ^ "Champion Air to go out of business in May," StarTribune.com, March 31, 2008
- ^ Champion Air will cease operations. Retrieved on 2007-03-31.
- ^ Cite error: Invalid
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