I mean... I guess, if you insist. I'm simply pointing out that relegation isn't going to work. Fans won't accept it, and owners would never approve of it anyway. So if that's your only idea, then I suppose we'll have exactly that.
They won't but to the conversation, we're definitely approaching a ceiling here. I was mentioning the other day... continuing to increase franchise values is the goal here, and because of that the NHL isn't going to be looking to expand just anywhere. There simply aren't that many valuable markets left to tap. IMO, we're not looking at any markets with a MSA of under 2 million people. And then I don't think we're looking at any existing NBA markets of under 3 million unless there's some X factor allowing for both to exist. We'll see if that prediction of mine turns out true. It definitely isn't going to be 50 teams. 40 maybe.
Houston, Atlanta, Phoenix we've discussed.
Inland Empire, CA isn't somewhere that any of the big leagues have considered yet. The population isn't really centralized, so it's hard to envision.
San Diego
Baltimore is unlikely
Portland has a bit of an X factor with its hockey history and general feeling that the market is underserved (though the latter would change if they got MLB)
Austin
Cincinnati is unlikely
Kansas City
That's it. 7 markets plus maybe 1 more Canadian teams if they can overcome the issues we've discussed ad nauseum. I don't see Orlando, Charlotte, San Antonio, Sacramento, Cleveland, or Indianapolis as having any kind of X factor to be 2-league indoor winter sports cities. Though some of those might be possible in 15-20 years. Orlando, Charlotte, and San Antonio in particular.
It's also a bit of an open question on whether or not the NHL would
want to max out the viable markets. Those first three are top-10 markets in terms of size in the United States, so the effect on franchise values league-wide with successful teams there could be significant. The rest would end up with a more limited impact.