ponder719
M-M-M-Matvei and the Jett
First of all - googling finds some suggestion of the "Flames were offered for one dollar" but not really any source. Since the Flames ultimately sold for $16 million to Calgary that probably was a much better deal for Cousins then giving the team to Turner.
Also - Ted Turner of 1977 was a different man than Ted Turner of 1995. Ted was a successful businessman in the 70s owning a bunch of TV stations that showed old re-runs, but it was only with the growth in cable (with his Superstation) and CNN that he became a billionaire, and thus had money to spend on projects like the Goodwill Games, or the Atlanta NHL team.
Can't say for sure, but the link I posted was Tom Cousins speaking about it directly, albeit with the veil of time between him and the incident (the book it's cribbed from was published in 2018, so the interview was probably then or slightly before.) That's probably the most accurate source we're going to get at this juncture. Cousins' claim was that his preference was to keep the team in Atlanta, even if he gave it away (apparently offered them to Turner, Delta, and Coca-Cola), and second, to own the team in Calgary, which Canadian law made an impossibility. He only sold it when those two options were ruled out. That said, yeah, $16M is a lot better outcome than just giving the team away from a financial perspective.
I do agree that Turner's situation changed in the intervening years, that probably had a lot to do with it, though it's a shame he couldn't have seen his way to keeping the team in Atlanta and bypassing the first interregnum entirely.