* Roustan in talks with U.S., Canadian private equity firms
* Roustan first talked of potential bid earlier this year
* Company agrees on restructuring plan with Sagard, Fairfax
* Company still pursuing higher bids (Recasts, adds comments from former chairman, time frame for sale)
By John Tilak and Matt Scuffham
Oct 31 (Reuters) - The former chairman of Performance Sports Group Ltd PSG.TO , which has filed for bankruptcy protection, is talking with U.S. and Canadian private equity firms about submitting a bid for the company, he said in an interview on Monday.
The maker of Bauer ice hockey gear said on Monday it had filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States and Canada to facilitate a restructuring and sale of almost all of its assets. The move comes after Performance defaulted on a loan payment by missing a deadline on Friday.
The company plans to hold the auction in January and to close a sale by the end of February, according to bankruptcy court documents.
"I'm mobilizing my team to prepare a bid," said former Chairman Graeme Roustan, who stepped down in 2012 and had been a critic of the company's management. He said many private equity firms had approached him to determine next steps.
Roustan had told Reuters in August that he was working with investment banks to explore a bid for the company. in Performance shares was suspended on Monday.
Performance, which also makes baseball bats and other sports equipment, said it would put its assets up for auction but already had a deal to sell nearly all of them for $575 million to an investor group led by Sagard Capital, its biggest shareholder, and Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd FFH.TO .
Reuters reported on Friday that Performance would file for bankruptcy with a buyer in hand and would seek out higher bids. Sagard and Fairfax are acting as "stalking horse" bidders, effectively setting a minimum price. U.S. bankruptcy court judge must approve any sale.
Roustan said he would challenge the Sagard deal and intended to ask the U.S. Department of Justice and Canadian competition authorities to investigate it. He said there was a conflict of interest as Sagard's owner, Canada's wealthy Desmarais family, is an investor in rival Adidas AG ADSGn.DE through its Power Corp of Canada POW.TO vehicle.
Performance and Power Corp did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In recent months, Performance has suffered from weakening sales and mounting losses, a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission probe and an inability to file financial statements because of an internal investigation into its accounting.
Performance also has lost customers because of industry consolidation and the bankruptcies of the Sports Authority Holdings Inc chain and Team Express online retailer earlier this year.
The company listed assets of $500 million to $1 billion and liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion in its voluntary petition filed in Delaware under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
Performance said it had begun proceedings under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act in Canada's Ontario Superior Court of Justice. company said it expected operations to continue uninterrupted during the bankruptcy process, through debtor-in-possession financing of $386 million provided by existing lenders and the investor group.
Founded in the 1920s, Performance Sports was owned for about a decade by sporting goods maker Nike Inc (NYSE:NKE) NKE.N and then sold to Graeme Roustan and private equity firm Kohlberg & Co in 2008. It listed on New York and Toronto's stock exchanges in 2014.