Spaulding wrote:
Is there a story behind MN and Winnipeg getting teams back? More than what's googleable. I didn't pay much attention to hockey at that time other than huge stories or the year I spent invested in a boy that liked hockey during my youth.
Sure. Let's do storytime for all four:
North Stars: Despite being in the most hockey-loving state in America, the Stars didn't have the strong management out of the gate that the Blues and Flyers did, nor did they ever get a generational talent or two like the Penguins did, so they always struggled relative to their Expansion Six peers and didn't have the popularity of the U or various high school programs. They were on hard times by '78 and merged with the Cleveland Barons, nee Oakland Seals, d/b/a the Minnesota North Stars but under Barons' ownership. By the end of the '80s, the Gunds (as in Gund Arena) wanted to move the Barons-Stars franchise back to the Bay Area, but the league wasn't keen on losing the Twin Cities. The compromise was that the franchise would de-merge and split the roster in half for 91-92, with the Gund franchise continuing as the San Jose Sharks while local ownership kept the North Stars going. Local ownership never happened and it ended up being a guy from the Flames' consortium named Norm Green.
Green wanted to get out of the Met Center, which was a slapped-up '60s construction in the burbs (it was right by the Mall of America), but the government wouldn't build him a new place and he couldn't move to the then-new Target Center in Minneapolis because the Timberwolves controlled the building and all its ancillary revenue streams, down to being a Pepsi building instead of a Coke building or vice-versa. While the state and Stars were at this impasse, Norm was putting his dick where it wasn't supposed to be and his wife demanded he get out of town. The target (npi) was the new arena coming up in Anaheim, where they'd become the Los Angeles Stars. Problem was, the L.A. Kings were brokering an expansion deal whereby Disney would get an expansion team and then immediately pay a encroachment fee to the Kings, so the league's power brokers basically told Green to go anywhere else and let them get their Disney money, so Dallas it was. As they feared all along, leaving Minnesota was a p.r. disaster for the National
Hockey League, so the wheels immediately started turning on shutting up the T-Wolves and moving the Winnipeg Jets to Minneapolis (more on that later). The state got to work on building a new arena in St. Paul, bypassing the T-Wolves issues, and the league quickly approved expansion in '97 for 2000.
Nordiques: While the Stars underachieved relative to the popularity of the sport itself in the market, Quebec City always did great at the gate. They had legendary players and the rivalry with the Habs got everyone worked into a froth. Even when they put out an all-time bad team in '90, attendance was good. The problem was that the Habs, through Molson, controlled a lot of the NHL's broadcasting contracts, and pretty much kept the Nords, owned by a competing brewery, off Hockey Night in Canada out of spite. Quebec City is a lot smaller than Montreal, and while the Nords made
some inroads in the Maritimes as the easternmost team in the league, they never really had a huge English-speaking fanbase.
The Colisee de Quebec was a 50-year-old jury-rigging of expansions and renovations, yet still had no air conditioning, not that the fans minded much, since they still put about 15,000 in there a night. At the same time, the province was strapped for cash and the Canadian dollar was at ~$.63 USD, which was disastrous when all player salaries had to be paid in American funds. Also, there was the small matter of the province attempting to secede from Canada (it failed and they blamed it on the Jews). With no taxpayer money coming to replace the Colisee and Gary Bettman's failure to get a salary cap in Lockout 1, the owners sold to the Denver Nuggets and the NHL rubber-stamped it. The league never wanted to be in Quebec City in the first place and only got roped into it as a package deal with Edmonton. Quebec finally did replace the Colisee in 2015 and made a play to buy the Coyotes before that, but the league shut them down. They applied for expansion alongside Las Vegas but the league rejected their bid and held off on awarding it until Seattle got their shit together instead. I'd keep an eye on them anyway.
Jets: Second verse, same as the first: the Winnipeg Arena was a piece of shit, the Canadian dollar was weak, player salaries were skyrocketing, and other owners didn't like them. Unlike the Nordiques, the Jets didn't pack the joint night-in-night-out -- I suspect there was a sense of learned helplessness that set in from years of getting fed to Edmonton and Calgary every season. But when the owner, not even a major corporation but just A Guy, said he was selling the team to businessmen from Minneapolis, everyone in Winnipeg lost their shit about it and did everything they could to stop the team from moving south (even though I think the new owners said they'd play a game or two there each year). They had rallies. They raised money. Kids emptied out their piggy banks. They were a hairsbreadth from setting up a Green Bay Packers system whereby the community would own the team as a not-for-profit until Gary Bettman moved the goalposts and decided that wasn't permissible, again, because the league never wanted to be there anyway. They were supposed to move for '95 but all this commotion bought them an extra year, during which time the new owners found out they couldn't share the Target Center. Sensing a real problem where the Jets couldn't go to the Cities but no single benefactor could buy them and keep them in Winnipeg, NBA Guy Gary Bettman called in a favor with Jerry Colangelo and sent the Minneapolis guys to Phoenix to play as a tenant of the Suns for 96-97. The arena floor was too small to fit a 200'x85' rink, but hey, they'd make it work, right?
They didn't make it work. America West sucked for hockey and the team started looking for a new arena in the suburbs. The Minneapolis guys went broke on the Coyotes and were about ready to give up and sell to Paul Allen, where they'd move in with the Trail Blazers up in Portland, but then a developer bought the team to use as an anchor tenant for a new strip mall. Problem was, the strip mall would be in Glendale, opposite all the rich transplants east of Phoenix. The developer also went broke on the Coyotes and sold to a guy who owns a trucking company. He
too went broke owning the Coyotes by 2009 and tried to sell them to the CEO of Blackberry, who would move the team to Hamilton. This guy had tried to move the Penguins and Predators up there and was smacked away both times, so the play was to declare bankruptcy and have Blackberry buy the team out of bankruptcy so that the league couldn't vote no on the sale. This put every North American league on DEFCON1 because it would set a precedent whereby the cartels could not determine their members anymore, so the league bought the Coyotes and ran them while trying to find new ownership. They couldn't, because every prospective owner (including JERRY) was basically asking to get the team for free because they were in so much debt. One group had the idea to outsource all their Nucks/Flames/Oilers home games to Saskatoon.
A group called True North Sports & Entertainment had since demolished and replaced the Winnipeg Arena and had been running an IHL/AHL team called the Moose as practice for getting Winnipeg back into the NHL. They were like the Wolves here, where they were not quite an NHL team but operated themselves a cut above most minor-league clubs. The money behind the group is a guy named David Thomson, as in Thomson-Reuters, a giant media conglomerate. As the Coyotes situation seemed to have no end in sight, they got in touch with the league to buy back the Coyotes and move them back to Winnipeg. This was not ideal, but they did have a billionaire backer, a new arena albeit on the small side, and it would be good for business north of the border, where the Canadian dollar was back around par. With all the documents just about drawn up, the NHL made one last-ditch offer to Glendale: the team will stay if you insure our risk by paying us $25 million.
Those stupid motherfuckers gave the NHL $25 million! They were setting up the press conference in Winnipeg to announce the sale when they got word at the last minute (well, it was like 10 or 15) that the Coyotes would stay for 2010-11. Everyone was sad, but then the whole thing played out again the next season. Once again, the NHL was losing money on the Coyotes and no one would buy the team except for the people in Winnipeg. Once again, same offer: we can stay one more year, but you'll have to give us $25 million.
THOSE DUMB FUCKING RUBES GAVE THEM THE MONEY
AGAIN!!! The state that gave us Barry Goldwater couldn't stop bailing out a frivolous and failing private enterprise. Once again, the NHL screwed Winnipeg to protect Phoenix and the Coyotes would stay put under league ownership for 11-12.
However, around the same time, things went tits-up with the Atlanta Thrashers. The Thrashers were a throw-in for the Atlanta Hawks and their arena when a bunch of basketball nerds bought the team from AOL Time Warner, which was getting out of the sports business. They never got along and were all suing each other over whether the Hawks should have signed Joe Johnson. It was stupid. Trying to make some money on this operation, they crunched the numbers and realized that as arena controllers, they'd come out ahead if they took 41+ Thrashers dates off the calendar and replaced them with concerts and stuff. So that's exactly what they did: Thrashers ownership essentially evicted itself. This was a serious problem for the league, because while they had the arena to manage the Phoenix situation, the Thrashers had nowhere in Atlanta to play. That was it. The Hawks weren't going to let them use the building anymore. After breathing a sigh of relief that the stupid Arizona hicks kept giving them money, they gave True North the go-ahead to buy the Thrashers and put that fire out nice and easy. The Thrashers weren't very popular and no one put up a fight. Winnipeg got
a team, if not its original team, and had a huge party downtown. On-ice results have been mixed but they've been a financial success ever since and punched well above their weight as a market of ~750,000. Meanwhile, the Coyotes went through three more ownership groups and they're falling apart
again. Houston? Austin? Quebec City?
I can do Hartford later, that one kinda got away from me