The Day

Lamont revives hockey myth in Connecticu­t

- CHRIS POWELL The Journal Inquirer

While residents of Hartford’s North End kept complainin­g about the longstandi­ng sewage overflows in their neighborho­od and four women were struck by a hit-and-run driver nearby, Gov. Ned Lamont discovered what the city really needs: the return of a big-league hockey team like the long-lost Whalers.

So the governor said he planned to get in touch with the commission­er of the National Hockey League about relocating the Arizona Coyotes to Hartford, since voters in the team’s hometown, Tempe, had just defeated a proposal to create an entertainm­ent district in which an arena might have been built for the team.

“This is a great hockey state,” the governor said, and Hartford is “a great hockey town. It’s evidenced by the passion we have for the Whalers going back years, still one of the best-selling jerseys. I think we can guarantee them a very strong market right here, and a government that’s ready to be their partner.”

Oh, please, Governor. That’s not how it was at all.

The Whalers left Hartford for North Carolina in 1997 precisely because Connecticu­t is not “a great hockey state” and Hartford is not “a great hockey town.” The Whalers couldn’t make money here but state government still managed to lose a lot on them.

Indeed, in 1996, as the Whalers demanded that state government build a new arena for them even as they couldn’t fill the arena at the Hartford Civic Center, the Journal Inquirer calculated that between financial bailouts, discounted and unpaid state loans, and free use of the arena, state government was subsidizin­g the team by $32 per ticket sold, or $1,400 per spectator per season.

Despite these subsidies, Whalers attendance was nearly the lowest in the league, and a Whalers game was always a little like the joke about Grateful Dead concerts: the same few thousand people all the time.

Most of Connecticu­t was indifferen­t, saving its local sports enthusiasm for University of Connecticu­t basketball.

Since there long has been talk of having state government spend hundreds of millions of dollars to renovate the civic center, the governor and others may figure that state government should buy a hockey team to go with the project and try to fill downtown Hartford with suburbanit­es more often, though they’ll all just leave the city when the game is over. Hockey won’t get them and their families to live in the city. Better schools, lower taxes, and less crime might, but that’s not going to happen.

Hockey? Been there, done that, and all we have left is the lousy jersey.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Sebastian Aho of the Carolina Hurricanes, right, celebrates his goal as Joakim Nordstrom of the Boston Bruins looks on during a 2018 game. In this game, the Hurricanes wore the Whalers jersey to honor the team’s Hartford past.
AP FILE PHOTO Sebastian Aho of the Carolina Hurricanes, right, celebrates his goal as Joakim Nordstrom of the Boston Bruins looks on during a 2018 game. In this game, the Hurricanes wore the Whalers jersey to honor the team’s Hartford past.

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