voyageur
Hockey fanatic
- Jul 10, 2011
- 10,529
- 9,955
I think Toronto in particular wants to be competing against the biggest American markets, New York, Boston, Detroit. The time zones is a big issue for a lot of the teams.The key word there is “might.” I don’t recall this ever remotely being a pressing demand by Canadian broadcast partners. And if it was it that was, it doesn’t seem like there’s enough muscle to sway the NHL into a major realignment.
Push comes to shove, someone will (over)pay for an NHL deal north of the border.
Winnipeg doesn't get a single game on Hockey Night in Canada on CBC this year so they aren't important to the major networks.
I think the next media deal in Canada is blocks, similar to the NFL, which allows Rogers, Bell, and Amazon to bid. TVA vs. Bell in Quebec could be a battleground. More exposure through more platforms.
I like the idea of Quebec getting in, and moving Boston into the Metropolitan division. Renewing a Canadiens-Nordiques rivalry that could produce huge tv ratings, and allowing Boston-New York to be a legitimate NHL rivalry. Dollars and sense the arena in Quebec could certainly allow the team to generate more revenue than Atlanta as a market, especially the merchandising side. Atlanta will get a team though because of the potential to create new hockey fans, and the corporate investment the league brand covets.
I wonder if the league would ever consider an 18-16 alignment, they did run a 16-14 alignment before carefully choosing the next two western expansion markets.