The Big Giant Head
Registered User
Thats a big bummer, sad for coyote fans. We finally established a REAL rivalry with another team and now they're moving. oh well...well have to piss someone else off this year in the playoffs i guess...
Thats a big bummer, sad for coyote fans. We finally established a REAL rivalry with another team and now they're moving. oh well...well have to piss someone else off this year in the playoffs i guess...
Thats a big bummer, sad for coyote fans. We finally established a REAL rivalry with another team and now they're moving. oh well...well have to piss someone else off this year in the playoffs i guess...
KC i say shouldn't be a top candidate. it may make sense geographically, but they had a team decades ago and it folded. '74-76 expansion with the Caps. sold and moved to become the Colorado Rockies.
i was to young to remember at the time so, "The Scouts suffered from inflated player costs, undercapitalized ownership, an economic downturn in the Midwest, poor performance on the ice and poor attendance. The Scouts drew an average of just 8,218 fans during their two years in 17,000-seat Kemper Arena (at a time when the league average was approximately 13,000). The team's 37 owners, buried in debt, mounted a season-ticket drive to raise more revenue. However, when only 2,000 people bought tickets, they concluded that the Scouts were not a viable venture and opted to sell". FROM WIKI
to me this is Atlanta all over again, so its up to me the NHL doesnt go to KC.
I think the Seattle soccer team draws close to 40k a game. I dont think they would have a problem with drawing for hockey. Its a pretty under rated sports town.
i never hear Salt Lake being brought up. the city has had the Golden Eagles for decades and i know the amateur presence has grown considerably. i live there back around '80 and played. at that time there were 3 rinks to play on and one was the old Salt Palace the Jazz and G Eagles played in. now they have numerous rinks, Jr teams and an actual high school league for puck. the city keeps growing, the game has obviously grown and the only team there is the Jazz.
I was thinking SLC too. Maybe the Mormon Church could buy them as an investment?
I think the NHL experiments into the South are over. This is just my opinion though.
Dallas is barely above water. Florida and Tampa Bay, despite solid seasons in recent years and marketable players (Stamkos) can't seem to stay relevant. Atlanta had to relocate.
North is probably a better shot right now at making money and growing the sport.
The Oregon/Washington area is a good place to start if you want to see American hockey grow. I mean, Portland Winterhawks, Seattle Thunderbirds, the Everett Silvertips, Tri-City Americans...they all do very well for junior teams in the area in terms of attendance and interest.
I was thinking SLC too. Maybe the Mormon Church could buy them as an investment?
Ohhhh...the promotion ideas are endless.
Putting expansion teams into the south isn't a good idea IMO, but relocating an already established team there is much better.
An even worse idea is expanding and relocating to the south, and then grouping those teams together by themselves.
Look at the SE division. It has a team that was kicked out of the former Patrick division, what was at the time 3 recent expansion franchises, and a relocated Hartford Whaler franchise. That division had nothing going for it. No history, no rivalries, 4 southern teams. It doesn't even register with fans in the northeast until playoff time when they complain about seeding.
Not all that different in the Pacific division either. The Kings have been fairly irrelevant for most of their history(even Gretzky was gone by 1998), grouped with what were 2 recent expansion teams, and the relocated Jets and North Stars.
No O6 teams, no Canadian teams. Other than Nashville, that's the NHL's southern expansion grouped together in two divisions that nobody really cares about.
An even worse idea is expanding and relocating to the south, and then grouping those teams together by themselves.
Look at the SE division. It has a team that was kicked out of the former Patrick division, what was at the time 3 recent expansion franchises, and a relocated Hartford Whaler franchise. That division had nothing going for it. No history, no rivalries, 4 southern teams. It doesn't even register with fans in the northeast until playoff time when they complain about seeding.
Not all that different in the Pacific division either. The Kings have been fairly irrelevant for most of their history(even Gretzky was gone by 1998), grouped with what were 2 recent expansion teams, and the relocated Jets and North Stars.
No O6 teams, no Canadian teams. Other than Nashville, that's the NHL's southern expansion grouped together in two divisions that nobody really cares about.
I agree. Moving an established team to a southern market I think can work well, but yes, if you are just lumping a bunch of reject and starter teams together, there's no drawing point. It's hard to get excited as a Nashville fan in the first few years if say Anaheim comes to town. If Toronto or the Rangers come to town though, much better, and not just because those teams have fans elsewhere. those teams have names which even non-hockey fans have heard of and recognize.
Phoenix is one of the top TV markets in the U.S., so I get what Bettman was trying to do. Moving the team out to an arena in Glendale was a huge mistake. It needed to be centrally located. Phoenix is not like LA where people don't seem to mind the drive.
Phoenix is one of the top TV markets in the U.S., so I get what Bettman was trying to do. Moving the team out to an arena in Glendale was a huge mistake. It needed to be centrally located. Phoenix is not like LA where people don't seem to mind the drive.
that is one way to look at it, but look at it from another way.
regional and nearby rivalries will grow. teams are more likely to be rivals and in time draw fans when they play often.
all one has to do is look at the SEC in football. they played and grew that conference for decades and really only played each other. now they are dominant and have some of the greatest rivalries in college football.
Jamison's attempt to purchase the Coyotes falls apart......again. the "tenuous lease agreement" he hashed out with the city is being voided. seriously this has to end at some point. it's bad for the hardcore faithful down there, but this is to the point of ridiculous now.
the city and most fans don't give two ***** about the team. all one has to do is see the stands during a game to determine that. it wouldn't surprise me if some WNBA teams can outdraw the Yotes.
it was a noble effort and try to keep the team there and truly establish hockey in the market. i am certain there is a growing hockey atmosphere in the area, that in years down the road will help to truly establish a franchise in the area.
it's time to look at relocation. either to Seattle or back to Quebec. personally i would like to see the Nordiques back in play. i am also skeptical that both SEA and VAN could support two teams in such proximity (150 miles). i dont know much about the market and atmosphere up there so i may be wrong. i know there are several Jr teams in the market other than that i dont know squat about it.
any move is also going to have to bring the question of realignment into immediate discussion and most importantly - resolution. we can't have WPG still playing in the east conf - SE division.
US Airways Center is not built for hockey. What other choices would they have had?
i used to buy into that but i call bs on that.
1)the stadium they built for the Cards is next to the arena. i don't see them struggling at the gates.
2) it's 18.5 miles from downtown city center and the old arena down there to the new rink. that's a 15 minute - 30 minute drive with traffic. i used to drive an hour plus from Fullerton to the Stapler in LA rush hour to get to games
Why did they choose Glendale over Scottsdale?
KC i say shouldn't be a top candidate. it may make sense geographically, but they had a team decades ago and it folded. '74-76 expansion with the Caps. sold and moved to become the Colorado Rockies.
i was to young to remember at the time so, "The Scouts suffered from inflated player costs, undercapitalized ownership, an economic downturn in the Midwest, poor performance on the ice and poor attendance. The Scouts drew an average of just 8,218 fans during their two years in 17,000-seat Kemper Arena (at a time when the league average was approximately 13,000). The team's 37 owners, buried in debt, mounted a season-ticket drive to raise more revenue. However, when only 2,000 people bought tickets, they concluded that the Scouts were not a viable venture and opted to sell". FROM WIKI
to me this is Atlanta all over again, so its up to me the NHL doesnt go to KC.
I was thinking SLC too. Maybe the Mormon Church could buy them as an investment?
Ohhhh...the promotion ideas are endless.