The Province

Leiweke to guide Seattle NHL expansion team

Former Seahawks executive sees hockey as ‘great fit’ for city, with group hoping to get club by 2020

- TIM BOOTH

SEATTLE — During his first stint in Seattle, Tod Leiweke helped develop the Seattle Seahawks into a benchmark franchise.

He’s returning to the Northwest this time with a chance to build a franchise from scratch — pending NHL approval.

Leiweke was introduced Wednesday as the CEO and president of the prospectiv­e NHL expansion franchise seeking to call Seattle home beginning with the 2020 season. The announceme­nt has been expected since Leiweke announced he was stepping down from his role with the NFL earlier this year. It was another step forward for the expansion bid.

“It’s kind of fun to start from scratch because you can build a culture the way you would want a culture to be built with like-minded people who want to serve, who love the game of hockey. In this, it is a grand opportunit­y,” Leiweke said.

The prospectiv­e majority owner of the franchise, David Bonderman, said he expects a possible conditiona­l announceme­nt about the franchise from the NHL in June and a potential formal announceme­nt in September coinciding with NHL Board of Governors meetings.

“We hope there is not any doubt about it and it’s certainly not just a formality. However, there is a process with the NHL and we expect to play through that process,” Bonderman said.

While announcing the president and CEO for a team that doesn’t exist yet might seem a bit presumptuo­us, Leiweke brings the kind of clout that will only strengthen a bid that almost appears to be a foregone conclusion.

Oak View Group, a partner in the franchise and the group responsibl­e for renovating KeyArena, is expected to begin constructi­on on the building later this fall and have the remodel done for the 2020 season. The season-ticket drive that started on March 1 was a rousing success and was capped at 33,000 deposits.

Leiweke got his start in hockey with the Minnesota Wild. He also worked in Vancouver and most recently helped build Tampa Bay into a powerhouse in the Eastern Conference. Leiweke left the Lightning in 2015 to become the COO of the NFL and didn’t have any interest in leaving the league office until the project in Seattle began to gain real traction.

“The fact is I found the NFL to be a pretty amazing and fascinatin­g place to work and I was starting to get quite comfortabl­e in my role there so I wasn’t looking,” Leiweke said. “But I think the stars aligned and my son’s advice was, ‘Dad, how can you not do this?’ Today, I think he’s right.”

Leiweke’s job will be to capitalize on a market whose demographi­cs have changed significan­tly since he left the Seahawks in 2010 after being largely responsibl­e for the team hiring head coach Pete Carroll. Seattle is the largest market in the country without a winter pro sports franchise and has seen an influx of wealth in recent years. Even when he was running the Seahawks, Leiweke believed Seattle was ripe for the NHL and the response to the season-ticket drive only strengthen­ed that belief.

“It really is a great fit. I always thought this could be a great hockey market and it proved it. So far, so good,” Leiweke said.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Potential part owners Jerry Bruckheime­r, left, and David Bonderman, centre, named Tod Leiweke president and CEO for a prospectiv­e NHL team Wednesday in Seattle. The group is seeking to have a team in time to begin play in 2020.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Potential part owners Jerry Bruckheime­r, left, and David Bonderman, centre, named Tod Leiweke president and CEO for a prospectiv­e NHL team Wednesday in Seattle. The group is seeking to have a team in time to begin play in 2020.

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