tarheelhockey
Offside Review Specialist
Birmingham isn't a big-league town by a long stretch. It doesn't have the economy or the population base, and is basically a far-flung suburb of Atlanta in some ways.
I wonder what Birmingham's attendance numbers were like in the WHA. They had a pretty solid owner in John Bassett.
1976-77 G Total Average
Indianapolis Racers 40 371,787 9,295
New England Whalers 40 356,726 8,918
Houston Aeros 40 353,209 8,830
Quebec Nordiques 40 343,922 8,598
[B]Birmingham Bulls 40 338,711 8,468[/B]
Winnipeg Jets 40 337,874 8,447
Edmonton Oilers 40 334,805 8,370
Cincinnati Stingers 40 305,860 7,647
Phoenix Roadrunners 40 279,384 6,985
Minnesota Fighting Saints 25 155,280 6,211
San Diego Mariners 40 240,508 6,013
Calgary Cowboys 40 172,535 4,313
LEAGUE 465 3,590,601 7,722
1977-78 G Total Average
Edmonton Oilers 41 429,862 10,484
Winnipeg Jets 41 397,085 9,685
New England Whalers 41 381,075 9,295
Quebec Nordiques 41 372,336 9,081
[B]Birmingham Bulls 41 359,860 8,777[/B]
Houston Aeros 41 314,698 7,676
Cincinnati Stingers 41 303,404 7,400
Indianapolis Racers 41 301,891 7,363
LEAGUE 328 2,860,211 8,720
1978-79 G Total Average
Edmonton Oilers 40 450,207 11,255
Quebec Nordiques 41 362,201 8,834
Winnipeg Jets 41 355,994 8,683
Cincinnati Stingers 41 288,967 7,048
New England Whalers 41 286,503 6,988
Indianapolis Racers 12 76,075 6,340
[B]Birmingham Bulls 41 258,975 6,316[/B]
LEAGUE 257 2,078,922 8,089
Interesting to see some of the cities mentioned here. I wonder how hockey would have worked in a city like Baltimore or Indianapolis.
To add to this topic I can remember Houston was mentioned as a new location for the Edmonton Oilers if they had moved in the 90's.
Saskatoon could likely support an NHL team, just as Regina could. Saskatchewan is a weird place man... people have no problem driving the Regina from all over the province to go see a Rider game.
If they had green jerseys and were called the Saskatchewan Rough riders, I see absolutely no way how they could fail.
The San Francisco Sharks (WHA) became the Quebec Nordiques who became the Colorado Avalance to replace the only other NHL team from the Centennial State, the Colorado Rockies, who became the New Jersey Devils prior to being the Kansas City Scouts.
Qu'est-ce what?
According to Wikipedia:
The Quebec Nordiques formed as one of the original World Hockey Association teams in 1972. The franchise was originally awarded to a group in San Francisco, as the San Francisco Sharks. However, the San Francisco group's funding collapsed prior to the start of the first season, and the WHA hastily sold the organization to a group of six Quebec City-based businessmen who owned the highly profitable Quebec Remparts junior team. They were named the Nordiques because they were one of the northernmost teams in professional sports in North America.
Voilà !
Now let's overlay the reasons behind the expansions:Defeated or withdrawn bids for an NHL franchise in the 60s and 70s:
1967 expansion: Baltimore, Buffalo, Cleveland, Vancouver.
(Approved: Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St.Louis, Minneapolis-St.Paul, San Francisco-Oakland, Los Angeles.)
1970 expansion: Baltimore (withdrawn: $6 million fee too expensive), Washington, Cleveland (withdrawn: see Baltimore), Atlanta, Kansas City.
(Approved: Buffalo, Vancouver.)
1972 expansion: Baltimore, Cleveland, Kansas City, Denver, San Diego.
(Approved: Long Island, Atlanta.)
1974 expansion: Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Dallas, Phoenix, San Diego.
(Approved: Washington, Kansas City.)
1970 expansion: After the outcry from Vancouver and Buffalo regarding the 1967 expansion, where the NHL actually gave a franchise to a city WITHOUT having an ownership group in place, the NHL rights the two main wrongs from the 1967 expansion by granting these cities franchises.
Grudy0 said:the NHL actually gave a franchise to a city WITHOUT having an ownership group in place...
It was St. Louis. Bill Wirtz was looking to unload the St. Louis Arena.I'm assuming this was KC?
Saskatoon could likely support an NHL team, just as Regina could. Saskatchewan is a weird place man... people have no problem driving the Regina from all over the province to go see a Rider game.
If they had green jerseys and were called the Saskatchewan Rough riders, I see absolutely no way how they could fail.
Also a shame that during the WHA merger, the NHL didn't allow the Cincinnati Stingers and Birmingham Bulls join with the other 4 teams. Can't remember why they were paid to disband (though both joined the Central League the next season; the Stingers folded 33 games in, while the Bulls lasted 58 games until the following year), but having an NHL team in Alabama would have made future expansion interesting, provided the Bulls could last that long.
How long did it take for the league to get pro-active?