CBC Edition

Arizona Coyotes fans devastated at losing their team

- Karen Pauls

For the first time since 1997, no one from three generation­s of the Dunaway family group at‐ tended the Arizona Coy‐ otes' fan appreciati­on night - the final game of the regular season - amid reports Wednesday's game against the Edmonton Oil‐ ers was the last one before the team is relocated.

Greg Dunaway gave away his season tickets because he and his father are travelling and his wife was worried the atmosphere wouldn't be a positive one for their sixyear-old son.

"I don't want my son to watch it. I'd rather him have the happy memories of us to‐ gether as a family," said Dunaway, whose father Robert was one of the origi‐ nal Coyotes season-ticket holders.

The team inspired him to get on the ice and he played hockey through high school. Now, his son Aidan takes lessons and is an ardent 'Y‐ otes fan. Dunaway is devas‐ tated by news his team will be relocated.

The NHL board of gover‐ nors voted unanimousl­y Thursday to approve a $1.2 billion US sale from Alex Meruelo to Utah Jazz owners Ryan and Ashley Smith, clear‐ ing the way for the fran‐ chise's move to Utah next season.

"What does it feel like? It feels like what it always feels to be like a Coyotes fan, con‐ stantly being kicked in the teeth and then you try and get back up. But unfortu‐ nately for us now, there's nothing to get up for," Dunaway said.

'Exploring our options'

There's been talk of the Coy‐ otes moving for years after the Winnipeg Jets relocated there in 1996, with so many different owners, in different rinks.

Their home the last two seasons was the 5,000-seat Mullett Arena, which they share with the Arizona State University team. It's become an embarrassm­ent for the NHL.

The team left its area in the nearby city of Glendale when the city terminated the lease. They wanted to build another rink in Tempe, but a plebiscite there got voted down in May 2023.

Meruelo has said he's committed to winning a land auction for another rink project in Phoenix.

The deal announced Thursday includes a provi‐ sion for Arizona to get an ex‐ pansion team if a new arena is built within the next five years. The deal will be facili‐ tated through the NHL, with $200 million going to league owners as a relocation fee.

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman refused to confirm the transactio­n as recently as Tuesday, saying, "I know there's a lot of rumours and speculatio­n ... we are explor‐ ing our options."

Arena and ownership troubles aside, one of the things Utah will have to do, which Phoenix never could, is grow the game like the Vegas Golden Knights have done, said Neil Longley, a professor emeritus of sport manage‐ ment at the University of Massachuse­tts.

"One of the things that sports economists look at is what's the state of competi‐ tion? Hockey was not in‐ herent to that [Phoenix] market," he said in an inter‐ view from Las Vegas.

"You have to convince the fan base that this is exciting, this is entertainm­ent, this is an event."

In other words, Longley said, it's more about the show than the game, al‐ though the on-ice perfor‐ mance also has to be good something that has dogged the Coyotes.

Longley is not convinced Phoenix is a hockey market, but Mark Florentine is.

He grew up playing hock‐ ey and watching the Win‐ nipeg Jets, and has attended hundreds of Coyotes games since he moved from Win‐ nipeg to Phoenix shortly af‐ ter the Jets did, in 1996.

Phoenix is a top-10 market in the United States so between that and all the snowbirds and "transplant­s," the city "should be able to support an NHL team," he said.

Curt Keilback agrees. He was the voice of the Jets in Winnipeg, following the team to Phoenix where he did play-by-play commentary un‐ til 2007. He's written a book about his experience­s.

Kielback remembers the utter devastatio­n when the team left Winnipeg, but also the excitement of the new franchise in Phoenix. He un‐ derstands the pain Coyotes fans are feeling.

"We had season-ticket holders who were always there and you always knew who they were. I knew a lot of them, by name, in fact. And they will be devastated by this because to them hockey was as important as it is to people in Winnipeg," Kielback said during an inter‐ view in Winnipeg, where he now lives.

"Legitimate hockey fans have a pretty good under‐ standing of what it feels to lose your jewel. It's a big part of life to a lot of people and it creates a big void . ... It's a sad day for a lot of people in Phoenix."

Sad, for people like Scott Fisher, who runs an Arizona Coyotes fan page on Face‐ book, a community he says helped him recover after a serious health scare in 2014.

The relocation is not a surprise, he said, referring to a requiem he has posted to his page.

As Fisher decides whether to keep the site alive, he says the overwhelmi­ng feeling by members is anger at the ownership and the NHL.

"We were getting all sorts of rumours and land deals, this and that," he said from his home in Mesa, AZ. "Noth‐ ing ever came to fruition."

Fisher said Salt Lake City has all the ingredient­s for success: an arena, "an owner with deep pockets," a fan base - and a young Coyotes team with potential.

"You put a couple of toptier free agents in there, you got a real good team real fast. And that's what's going to happen," he said.

Fisher doesn't believe the current owner or anyone else will build an NHL arena in the Phoenix area.

"They're never coming back."

But, self-proclaimed "diehard Coyotes fan" Kevin Rhodes still has hope the

NHL will ultimately have a home in Phoenix.

"From a business side, I think [a move] probably makes sense right now. They do need a bigger arena. The players, I think, need to feel more stability for their own lives," he said.

"It seems like the NHL re‐ ally wants hockey here. We are a growing market, people are still moving into the state. If they are able to build the arena more centralize­d, I think it will be successful."

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