Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NHL aims to keep Coyotes in Arizona

- STEPHEN WHYNO

LAS VEGAS — Commission­er Gary Bettman says the NHL is still committed to Arizona after Tempe voters rejected a referendum for a Coyotes arena. Bettman said the team is looking at other areas around Phoenix for a longterm home.

“It’s a good market, and if we can make it work, we’ll make it work,” Bettman sa i d . “We’ve had our challenges.”

Bettman, who held his annual state of the league news conference Saturday before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Vegas Golden Knights and Florida Panthers, said he was surprised and disappoint­ed but not shocked by the result of the vote last month.

“Team- related referendum­s in all sports don’t do well,” Bettman said. “The Islanders did one (in 2011) and it lost. They got their building. When we were looking at Columbus for an expansion, that building referendum went down.”

The future of the Coyotes is now a major question as they go into a second season playing at a 5,000-seat college rink on Arizona State’s campus.

Marty Walsh, who took over as executive director of the NHL Players’ Associatio­n, said members of the Coyotes have expressed concerns about the current arena setup and wants answers about a more permanent solution.

“If we don’t have, in the near future a new location, we have to have a serious conversati­on,” Walsh said after Bettman’s news conference. “These players can’t continue to play in a college hockey rink as National Hockey League players. You just can’t do it. It doesn’t look right. It doesn’t feel right.”

Asked Saturday why the league has been so patient about keeping the Coyotes in Arizona amid turmoil over the years from ownership changes to arena uncertaint­y, Bettman pointed to the size of the market and the team being a bit of a “victim of circumstan­ce.” While there were questions raised about interest for a team in Quebec City or Salt Lake City — or a second in Toronto — relocation is not currently being considered.

“We’re in a better position to resist moving than maybe we were 20 or 30 years ago,” Bettman said. “We want to make sure we explore all options at this stage of where we are before we would consider having to relocate a club, and I’m hopeful we won’t have to.”

At the other end of the spectrum are the Ottawa Senators, who are close to being sold for what Bettman expects will be around a billion dollars — “give or take.”

“I’ve always felt that we’ve been undervalue­d, so this, to me, is just an affirmatio­n that our franchises are more valuable than Forbes or Sportico or many investment bankers have said,” Bettman said. “Our competitiv­e balance is extraordin­ary, and that should somehow be equating to higher values, and I think you’re beginning to see that.”

When the final ends, Bettman may meet with executive Stan Bowman and Coach Joel Quennevill­e, whom he must reinstate for either to take another job with a team. Bowman resigned as Blackhawks GM and Quennevill­e as Panthers coach in October 2021 after an investigat­ion into Chicago’s 2010 sexual assault scandal revealed their roles in the team mishandlin­g the situation.

Bettman said Bowman and Quennevill­e each requested a meeting and that his office told them he’d deal with them after the playoffs are over.

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