The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coyotes bid farewell to Arizona

League leaving door open for expansion team.

- By Matt Bonesteel

For years, as the Arizona Coyotes wandered the Phoenix area in search of a permanent place to lay down their ice amid an unforgivin­g desert, their fans had a tradition. When each night’s rendition of the national anthem reached “Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there,” they would join in for those last two words.

They were still there, despite it all: three stadiums, two of which were wholly unsuitable for top-level pro hockey; seven ownership groups since the team arrived in Arizona from Winnipeg in 1996; and little success.

Wednesday night, the Coyotes’ fans got to chime in during the anthem one last time before — its options exhausted, for now — the team moves away. Arizona’s 5-2 win over the Edmonton

Oilers was the last the team played in Arizona before it departs for Salt Lake City, a move the NHL’s board of governors approved Thursday.

The Utah version of the team, as yet nameless, will be owned by a group led by Jazz owner Ryan Smith and his wife, Ashley Smith. Akin to the way the Cleveland Browns left that identity behind when they moved to Baltimore and became the Ravens, the Coyotes’ name, logo and other brand marks will lie dormant in Arizona as owner Alex Meruelo seeks to get a new facility — one “appropriat­e for an NHL team,” as the league put it in a news release — fully constructe­d within five years.

If Meruelo is successful, it appears the league would authorize an expansion to put a revived version of the Coyotes in his new arena. In the meantime, the Coyotes’ last game in Arizona was played at Mullett Arena, a 5,000-seat venue on the Arizona State University campus that is far smaller than any other NHL arena.

In 2021, the city of Glendale, Ariz., announced it would not extend the lease agreement it had with the franchise to play at what is now known as Desert Diamond Arena, the cityowned stadium that had been the team’s home since 2003. Before that, the Coyotes had played at America West Arena, a venue that had not been built with hockey in mind: Among its other deficienci­es, some seats hung over one end of the ice, and fans sitting in those sections could not see the goal directly below.

The Coyotes tried to get a new arena built in Tempe, near Phoenix’s airport, but a trio of ballot measures that would have cleared the way for constructi­on failed at the polls in 2023, all but dooming the team to relocation.

Amid all that transience and all those owners — at one point, the NHL stepped in after the team’s owners declared bankruptcy — the Coyotes didn’t win a whole lot. Arizona reached the playoffs in four of its first five seasons in the desert but has been back only five times over the past 23 seasons. Since a surprising run to the Western Conference finals in 2012, the Coyotes have won a grand total of four playoff games.

Still, that didn’t preclude an emotional send-off for the team Wednesday night.

“This is absolutely gut-wrenching, heartbreak­ing,” Tyson Nash, a former Arizona player who has done color commentary for the Coyotes’ radio and TV broadcasts since 2008, said in his pregame comments. “Best city in the world — I can’t say it enough. I’m absolutely in shock that possibly we have lost our hockey team. That was a gift. The NHL gave us a gift here in Arizona and we possibly just lost it. I’m on the brink of tears.”

Todd Walsh, who has been part of the Coyotes’ broadcasti­ng team since the team moved to Arizona in 1996, was equally emotional.

“If you’re watching here tonight and haven’t watched in a few years and wanted to check it out, thank you. If you have been a longtime viewer, thank you,” he said. “Your investment in this sport and the people in it and our broadcast crew, I know, means the world to everybody in the hockey community. This is a family, and that’s one thing I learned over 2,000 games ago, I can tell you that.”

The fans, many of them wearing white in one last attempt to re-create the passion of the Coyotes’ early years in the desert, at one point took out their frustratio­ns on the team’s future home, chanting, “Salt Lake sucks.”

After the final whistle, team employees joined the Coyotes’ players and coaches on the ice to salute the 4,600 fans who showed up one last time.

“The NHL’s belief in Arizona has never wavered,” NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman said Thursday in a statement. “We thank Alex Meruelo for his commitment to the franchise and Arizona, and we fully support his ongoing efforts to secure a new home in the desert for the Coyotes. We also want to acknowledg­e the loyal hockey fans of Arizona, who have supported their team with dedication for nearly three decades while growing the game.”

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? Coyotes mascot Howler acknowledg­es fans after the team’s season-ending game against Edmonton. The team will be relocated to Utah next season.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP Coyotes mascot Howler acknowledg­es fans after the team’s season-ending game against Edmonton. The team will be relocated to Utah next season.

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