The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coyotes’ sale to Utah owner coming soon

- By John Marshall STEVE C. WILSON/AP 2006

TEMPE. ARIZ. — The Arizona Coyotes likely will be sold to Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith shortly after the team’s final game and will include a provision guaranteei­ng current owner Alex Meruelo an expansion team if a new arena is built within five years, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press.

The $1 billion sale is expected to happen between the Coyotes’ final game of the 2023-24 season on Wednesday and the start of the playoffs on Saturday, barring unforeseen circumstan­ces, the person said on condition of anonymity because the planned deal has not been announced.

The deal will transfer the franchise’s hockey operations first to the NHL, then to Smith, who plans to move the team to Salt Lake City. Meruelo will maintain business operations to move forward with a planned $3 billion project that will include a new arena in north Phoenix. Meruelo also will continue to own the Tucson Roadrunner­s, the franchise’s AHL affiliate, and plans to move the team to 5,000-seat Mullett Arena on Arizona State’s campus in Tempe, the current temporary home of the Coyotes.

Once an arena is built, Meruelo will pay back the $1 billion and move forward with the expansion franchise.

Meruelo and NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman are expected to announce the deal at a joint news conference once the deal is completed. Coyotes general manager Bill Armstrong traveled to Edmonton on Friday night to inform players and coaches of the team’s plans after news of the potential relocation to Salt Lake City were leaked.

“We are unable to make any official comments at this time,” Meruelo said in a statement Saturday. “However, you have my commitment that I am going to speak on all of these issues and publicly address all of your concerns as promptly as possible.”

The NHL had supported the Coyotes’ plan to buy a tract of land at auction to build a new arena, but was hesitant to have the team continue playing at Mullett Arena, which they share with various Arizona State teams. The Coyotes had hoped to close a deal on the land valued at $68 million by the end of last year before delays pushed the auction until June.

Meruelo has been adamant about not wanting to sell the team and rebuffed numerous offers through the years, but is going through with the deal because he felt it was unfair to the players to continue playing in an arena that’s not up to NHL standards, the person said. The uncertaint­y of the land auction meant the Coyotes couldn’t guarantee a new arena would be built, which, given the franchise’s past struggles finding a permanent home, led the NHL to push Meruelo to seek other options.

Meruelo wanted to keep the Roadrunner­s and move them to Tempe to keep as much of his business operations intact as the group works with Phoenix city officials to build the new arena, along with continuing the franchise’s youth hockey programs in the state, the person said.

The Coyotes have been on uncertain ground almost since the day the franchise relocated from Winnipeg in 1996.

The team shared then-America West Arena with the NBA’s Phoenix Suns before moving to Glendale in 2003. When an ownership group that included developer Steve Ellman and Wayne Gretzky ran into financial difficulti­es, the franchise was sold to trucking magnate Jerry Moyes in 2005.

When Moyes filed for bankruptcy in 2009, the NHL assumed operationa­l control of the franchise and paid its bills for the next four years until the franchise was purchased by a group of Canadian businessme­n in 2013. Philadelph­ia hedge fund manager Andrew Barroway bought controllin­g interest from that group the next year and the rest of the shares of the team in 2017. Meruelo bought controllin­g interest from Barroway in 2019.

The Coyotes had a longterm, multimilli­on deal to play at then-Gila River Arena in Glendale before the city backed out in 2015. The franchise had been on an annual lease with Glendale until the city announced it would not renew for the 2021-22 season.

The Coyotes had hoped to build a $2.3 billion entertainm­ent district with a new arena in Tempe, but voters overwhelmi­ngly turned down the referendum last year. The team has played the past two seasons at Mullett Arena.

Preparatio­ns are being made behind the scenes and in the public eye for an NHL team is in Salt Lake City. Smith on social media last week solicited suggestion­s for a team name.

Smith in January noted not only his interest in having an NHL club in Salt Lake City but the ability to make that happen immediatel­y. The Smith Entertainm­ent Group asked at the time for the initiation of an expansion process, something multiple groups in Atlanta also are seeking. The Jazz ownership plan calls for using the Delta Center as a temporary home for a hockey team until a new arena is constructe­d.

The NHL has said it has no current plans to expand beyond 32 teams, despite speculatio­n this year over additions in Salt Lake City, Atlanta and Houston.

 ?? ?? The Coyotes, who currently play in a 5,000-seat arena, will play at Energy Solutions Arena in Salt Lake City, which also is the home of the Utah Jazz.
The Coyotes, who currently play in a 5,000-seat arena, will play at Energy Solutions Arena in Salt Lake City, which also is the home of the Utah Jazz.

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