Tag Archives: Winnipeg

With Any Offense At All, Bombers are 3-0. As it is….

It was quite an interesting night at Canad Inns Stadium on Thursday night. Interesting in the same sense that a four-hour concert of Sub-Saharan African Music Traditions is interesting.

It was interesting, certainly, but just not particularly entertaining.

The Bombers were beaten 21-20 by the Calgary Stampeders on a sleepy night when the Bomber defense deserved a much better fate.

The Bombers held Smilin’ Hank Burris to just 183 yards passing (a pittance) and only 14 points, and yet the offense not only couldn’t score in a womens’ prison with a handful of pardons, it also gave up a pick six to Keon Raymond.

For the third straight week, the Bombers defense played as if it was the best unit in the CFL. And on Thursday night, they did it without rock-solid Alex Suber who was injured on the first play of the game.

The Bombers offense was downright dreadful on Thursday. This is a team that needs to head back to the drawing board. To make things worse, starting quarterback Buck Pierce was injured in the first half and while Joey Elliott played as well as anyone could ever have expected – coming off the bench against a very good Calgary defense – he was no match for a Stamps team that not only plays tough, it doesn’t give up very many yards.

In fairness to Elliott, he did give the Bombers a chance to win on the final series of downs, but Justin Palardy missed a tough 44-yard field goal against the wind and the Bombers were toast. A 21-20 loss is not a blowout and Winnipeg’s defense showed it could play with Smilin’ Hank and all of that Calgary speed, but Winnipeg’s Paul LaPolice-style offense is absolutely terrible. Dull, predictable – well, often not predictable because it does things on second down that no predictable coach would ever do (Why is it, when the Bombers have second and eight, they almost always throw a four-yard pass? Duh?) — the Bombers offense is weak, slow and stone-handed.

Right now, the Bombers are still in the midst of the easy part of their schedule. They go to 1-1 Toronto next Saturday afternoon, play 0-2 B.C. at home on Thursday the 28th, get Edmonton on Aug. 5 at home, then go to B.C. on the 13th and come back to face Hamilton on the 26th (after the bye week). They are definitely capable of winning all five of those games.

But unless the offense figures things out, they won’t have much left in the defensive tank once they have to go to Saskatchewan on Labour Day. You can’t win consistently  in professional football with only your defense and special teams playing up to snuff.

If this offense doesn’t play better soon, it could be a long season.

 

 

Winnipeg Hockey Fans Were Right. They Almost Had The Coyotes Last Year.

Last February, when Joe Aiello and I started talking about all the hockey rumors on 92-CITI-FM, it was intriguing to watch the response. The local mainstream media instantly crapped all over us.

Joe and I were expressing our interest in all the chatter that had been emanating from MTS Centre where more than one employee talked openly about the changes that were planned for the building, the employees and the future of hockey in Winnipeg.

At first, it was thought that there was an opportunity for True North Sports and Entertainment to acquire the Atlanta Thrashers, but as we looked and listened more closely, it was apparent there was an even greater chance, at the time, that the Phoenix Coyotes might move north. The rumors did not stop circulating until mid-May and by then, it was clear that while most MTS Centre employees were convinced something was happening, by the middle of May, all the talk had died.

We thought we were right. We thought Winnipeg hockey fans and MTS employees were right, but unless True North ever admitted it piblicly, no one would know for sure.

Then, this past week, Mark Chipman, president of True North, admitted during a speech to the Chamber of Commerce that he and his partner, David Thomson were only minutes away from acquiring the Coyotes last May.

In fact, according to Chipman, if the City of Glendale had not committed to a guarantee of $25 million toward any monies lost by the Coyotes operation during the 2010-11 season, the Phoenix hockey franchise would have been heading back to Winnipeg on May 10, 2010.

“We literally came within 10 minutes of acquiring (the Coyotes) in May 2010 when the City of Glendale met a 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time deadline to wire the funds necessary to pay for the league’s losses for the (2010-11) season,” he told the Commerce gathering at the Fairmont.

“We left somewhat disappointed, but uplifted by the fact that the league had taken us so seriously and, as a consequence, had indicated it would just be a matter of time before we would actually acquire a team.”

That turned out to be true, too.

Although it really doesn’t matter now whether or not True North was close to acquiring a team 13 months ago, it’s nice to know that the time Joe and I spent chasing all the talk, wasn’t in vain. The fact is, True North was close to bringing the NHL back to Winnipeg, despite the protests of the major media. And, in the end, our first instinct, the Atlanta Thrashers, turned out to be correct. At least, it became correct on May 31, 2011.

I now feel I can look back on what I wrote at www.citifm.ca and rest secure in the knowledge that we were right — and so too, were the hockey fans of Winnipeg.

 

 

The NHL Returns to Winnipeg.

I spent lunch hour at the Forks yesterday and it was invigorating. Hundreds of people converged on Winnipeg’s meeting place to celebrate the return of the NHL to Winnipeg.

Perhaps I should make that a little clearer: “Return of the Jets.” Some kids who were barely out of diapers when the Jets played their last game in 1996 were sporting Jets jerseys at the Forks yesterday. Although it’s likely this team will not be the Jets — we’ve heard Manitoba Somethings, maybe Falcons or Polar Bears –it’s pretty definite now that 75-80 per cent of Winnipeg hockey fans WANT the team be the Winnipeg Jets.

But yesterday, the name argument took a back seat to the simple realization that the National Hockey League would once again have Winnipeg as a member.

Mark Chipman, David Thomson, Jim Ludlow and, yes, Gary Bettman (looking like a guy who just got punched him the stomach) made it official. The National Hockey League has indeed, returned to Winnipeg.

At a news conference yesterday at the MTS Centre, True North Sports and Entertainment announced that it had completed a deal to purchase the Atlanta Thrashers and the team would begin play this fall at Winnipeg’s downtown arena. Through it all you got the feeling Bettman did NOT want this to happen. His Southern U.S. experiment has started to crumble and his body language suggested he was pained by the fact he had to move a team out of the seventh-largest TV market in the United States and into a city of 700,000 on the Canadian prairie.

There was some talk that if Winnipeg’s owners didn’t sell 13,000 season tickets by June 21, there was a chance the NHL’s board of governors would not allow the team to move to Winnipeg, but that just seemed outrageous. Yesterday, Chipman said that True North had signed off on a deal to purchase the team from the Atlanta Spirit Group and while Winnipeggers were partying at the Forks, the rich guys who own ASG were doing cartwheels in their executive offices, having dumped the Thrashers, a team that has allegedly lost $130 million in five years. One suspects those guys aren’t about to take the team back so if True North doesn’t sell 13,000 season tickets, what’s the NHL going to do? Move the team to Portage? Winnipeg is the ONLY alternative to Atlanta and I’m sure that with the use of some brilliant legal term there was a “no give-backsies clause” in the final sales contract.

Meanwhile, it appears Moose GM Craig Heisinger will play an important role with Winnipeg’s new franchise and last night Atlanta’s president Don Waddell said he would not accompany the team to Winnipeg. Head coach Craig Ramsey was in Winnipeg yesterday and will likely keep his job.

And just to make everyone happy, Bettman said yesterday, if the new owners decide they want to use the Jets name, the NHL will give it to them.

The NHL is coming back to the ‘Peg. Just as we wrote last year, it was the Atlanta Thrashers, not the Phoenix Coyotes who wound up moving to River City.

It made for a very nice day. Of course, so did getting my picture taken with Ab McDonald, Bill Lesuk and Thomas Steen.

 

Lawyers About to Sign Off on Thrashers Move. Breathtaking.

The lawyers are about to sign off on a deal that has been done in principle for weeks. The Atlanta Thrashers are about to move to Winnipeg.

Those in the TV and security biz have been told to prepare for a public announcement as soon as Tuesday and as late as Thursday. Regardless, the freight train that was reality could not be derailed. Gary Bettman’s experiment with the Southern U.S. markets has long been in financial jeopardy and now, the Exodus has begun.

The Atlanta Thrashers, long an NHL money loser because its owners didn’t give a hoot about hockey and sucked up all the money from Phillips Arena in order to give it to the basketball team, will soon be no more. Hockey was the poor sister in that college football and basketball town and it was soon to be out the door.

We first reported on this move in February of 2010 and only the legal haggling over price, Gary Bettman’s commitment to his southern dream and a group of league owners who dreaded the day the NHL would return to a city of 700,000 on the Canadian prairie, kept Atlanta’s hopes alive. This Atlanta move to Winnipeg was a self-fulfilling prophecy and now it appears to have been fulfilled.

Our small Western city will soon have the NHL back. It is unlikely the team will be called the Jets and it’s also unlikely it will battle for the playoffs at what is likely to be a $62 million salary cap ceiling. This will be a frugal team, run by frugal people and it’s likely that it will always have to play better than its talent.

For better or worse, the NHL is returning to Winnipeg. Having a team to cheer for again will be breathtaking and so too will the price of the tickets, the suites and the corporate sponsorships.

Still, it’s time for a party, Winnipeg. It’s time to raise a glass to our new-found prosperity. Some very philanthropic business people have handed us a $170 million gift.

And that, too, is breathtaking.

 

Thrashers Still Not in Winnipeg. So?

It would appear that the National Hockey League’s cranky old owners are doing everything they possibly can to delay the sale and move of the Atlanta Thrashers to Winnipeg.

It’s not that there is much the league can do. At worst, it can hold up the deal to sell the Thrashers to True North Sports and Entertainment and make it more difficult to sell tickets and corporate sponsorships in Winnipeg.

After all, the Atlanta deal isn’t the Phoenix deal. In Phoenix, the league owns the team and essentially all the revenue from the arena. Any legitimate owner would have that same luxury. In Atlanta, an owner would own the team and not the arena and therefore would not have the ability to raise revenues from the building outside of hockey nights. It’s a bad business model and the NHL knows it. In Winnipeg, True North has the rights to the building and the hockey team and all the revenues. This deal and move is as much about real estate as it is about ice hockey.

However, while Gary Bettman and his bosses continue to claim that the Thrashers-to-Winnipeg deal is not done, there is reason to believe that the main portion of the sale agreement is completed and that the rest is just legal-eze. After all, Atlanta Spirit Group, the current owners cutting the deal to sell to Winnipeg said earlier this week that the deal “is 80 per cent done.”

More than a week ago, Toronto’s Globe and Mail, the newspaper owned by David Thomson, the major financier of the deal to buy the Thrashers and move them to Winnipeg, announced that the deal was done and the announcement would be made on Tuesday, May 24.

The story was written by Stephen Brunt, one of the country’s finest sportswriters and columnists, but also a gentleman who breaks very few stories. In fact, if Brunt breaks a story, one figures that it’s broken. Period. He’s not the kind of guy who turns up two days later and apologizes for being wrong. And to Brunt’s credit, he went on radio shows right across Canada to stand by his scoop.

Now, here we are, four days after the announcement was supposed to have been made and still… insert sound of crickets chirping here. In fact, True North Sports and Entertainment has said without hesitation that the deal is not done and there will definitely be no announcement before NEXT Tuesday.

However, if one studies Brunt’s story, the insider leaks from Atlanta and NHL commissioner Gary Bettman’s almost angry response to anyone who suggests, “the deal is done,” it’s clear that the buyers and sellers have a deal, but the NHL itself is doing everything it can to delay the sale in an effort to (a) find a local owner in Atlanta immediately(?) or (b) hold up the move until the beginning of the 2012-13 season (?) or what?

What, could mean the NHL’s by-laws. Thrashers fans in Atlanta (yes, there are some) dug up the following from the league’s own constitution and posted it on SB Nation Atlanta:

36.1: Investigation

(a) Any Member Club seeking consent for a transfer of its franchise and club to a different city or borough in accordance with Section 4.2 of the Constitution, shall file a written application for such consent with the Commissioner of the League.

(b) Such applications shall be filed no later than January 1st of the year prior to the year in which it is proposed the Club will commence its first season in the new location, unless a majority of the Member Clubs consents to a later filing date.

(c) The application shall include a statement as to why the applicant seeks such transfer. It shall also include a statement of reasons why the applicant believes consent to the proposed transfer should be given and shall be accompanied by such documentation as the applicant deems appropriate, in light of the provisions of this By-Law Section 36 and Section 42 of the Constitution.

The aforementioned could be a big reason why many American owners have no desire to see the Thrashers go anywhere in 2011-12. They want more answers.

And that’s probably why Commissioner Gary Bettman went on his radio show on Friday and ripped anyone who believes the Thrashers are moving. That would include me, who believes the Thrashers deal has been in the works for more than a year and is so close to done, it’s done.

“Maybe at some point there will be a deal, maybe there will never be a deal,” Bettman said during the NHL Hour With Commissioner Gary Bettman on NHL Radio. “But there isn’t one now.”

Bettman claimed there is no deal yet. and that the owners in Atlanta were only “exploring their options,” (that’s a festering pile of excrement).

“If the team gets sold, and if the team gets moved, then there will be a press conference,” Bettman told his radio listeners. “If you keep saying it enough, you might ultimately be right. But the level of accountability, in terms of the willingness to just put anything out there in terms of a news story, is really just ridiculous.”

Bettman took calls from fans on Friday’s show and when a fan in Atlanta asked him about the move, the commissioner said that the team still hadn’t gone anywhere (oh, how observant).

“Well nobody has decided to do anything yet,” Bettman said. “There isn’t a deal. If there is a deal, it has to go through the usual processes and procedures that we have. But the issue, if there’s a problem that’s unsolvable, despite the grass roots hockey, despite all of the corporate headquarters, is there somebody, if it gets to this point where the current owners don’t want to own it anymore, is there somebody who wants to own this franchise in Atlanta?

“The threshold has always been for us, when we’ve had to move a franchise, (nobody wanted) to own the team there anymore. It would be one of those head scratchers where you say, ‘Look at all of this great corporate opportunity, look at all of this grass roots hockey, why doesn’t somebody want to own a team here?’ And that would be a difficult, but unfortunate situation to be dealing with if it has reached, or does reach that point.”

It’s getting late. Every day that the deal is not done is another day the NHL’s board of governors have to debate the legality of this move and vote not to allow it. It’s also another day that True North loses to sell tickets and corporate sponsorships.

One senses this deal has been “done” for some time, but there are, apparently, some things in the way. Those things relate directly to the NHL’s concern about moving a team from the seventh-largest TV market in the United States to a city of 700,000 in the middle of the prairie. They relate directly to the NHL’s concern that Winnipeg can be reached from only two cities in the United States on a regular airline schedule – Minneapolis and Chicago. They relate directly to the fact Winnipeg does not have a five-star hotel for teams to bunk in. They relate directly to the fact Winnipeg would have the smallest arena in the NHL — by a long shot. They relate directly to the fact that if Winnipeg sold out every ticket for every single game the team would be 24th or 25th in league attendance. They relate to the fact that they would be moving a team from a city of six million to a city of 700,000 and from a city that has already lost an NHL team to another city, in a different country, that has already lost an NHL team.

The owners are nervous about all of this and Gary Bettman just happens to be the angry face of that nervousness.

 

Great For Winnipeg. A Disaster for the NHL.

The City of Winnipeg still waits for the announcement that will, in all certainty, arrive this coming week.  The Mayor and Premier both say it will come and the Toronto newspaper owned by the man who will purchase the team and give it to Winnipeg has already reported that the deal is done.

So as the city waits for the Atlanta Thrashers to arrive, it’s hard not to suspect that the National Hockey League has had its first domino drop.

Is this the end of the Great Southern Hockey Experiment? It easily could have ended in Phoenix and you have to figure Phoenix will still be the next to go. And, hey, it’s no picnic in Florida, Nashville or Columbus these days either.

Ponder this for a second:

A small city on the Canadian prairie – and Americans have every right to call it “the middle of nowhere” – is now more desirable a place for a National Hockey League franchise than the seventh largest television market in the United States.

That says so many things about (a) the bleak U.S. economy, (b) the game of hockey itself (c) the death of the non-traditional market experiment and (d) the simple economics of the game.

The NHL will leave a city that has almost 10 times as many people as its destination and plays in an arena that has 18,545 seats and the league will move it to a city that is only accessible directly by air on a regular schedule from two or three U.S. cities and has an arena with only 15,000 seats.

It’s moving from a $213 million arena built in 1999 to a $133 million arena built in 2004. It is such an incredible example of downsizing that it tells major financial and corporate leaders in the United States that the NHL is a dying industry. There are people in places in the Southern and Western United States who will never buy a ticket to a sporting event that involves a team from Winnipeg because those poor people have no idea what, let alone where, a Winnipeg is.

The owners in Atlanta say the team has lost $40 million a year for the last five years. That’s a questionable number, but it does say clearly that the owners in Atlanta have enough of their “dog” hockey franchise.

As a result, the NHL has now admitted defeat. When you take a franchise out of the seventh largest TV market in the United States and move it to a Canadian city with the same population as Des Moines, Iowa, you have given up. If I’m an American investor and I see you pulling out of cities of nearly six million to head off to cities in other countries with populations of 700,000, I wouldn’t put a plug nickel into your league. Hell, UFC has given no indication it would ever come to Winnipeg. NASCAR couldn’t find it on a map. MLB, NFL or NBA? Bwahahahaha.

The experiment is over. Because if the NHL can’t find an owner in Phoenix, can’t get a building built on Long Island, is losing $25 million a year in Columbus and $10-$15 million a year in Nashville, is a disaster in South Florida and can longer sellout in Dallas or Denver, it’s done. As dead as the Hartford Whalers. There aren’t enough stupid rich people in America left to buy these money-pit franchises.

And what’s going to happen when the NHLPA’s Donald Fehr starts to stare down Gary Bettman? The NBA and the NFL already have labour problems. Hockey is next.

I worry about the future of this league. The hockey is great. But in far too many markets, the business is a mess.

 

Brunt Says Deal is Done

Stephen Brunt in The Globe and Mail is reporting tonight that the deal is done: The Atlanta Thrashers will be moving to Winnipeg.

Brunt says that announcement will be made Tuesday.

More to come.

Edmonton to Get $450 million Arena

Edmonton city council has approved an agreement framework with Darryl Katz and his associates, the owners of the Edmonton Oilers, to build a new arena in downtown Edmonton. It’s not a done deal, but it’s getting close and it’s a deal that says a lot about the NHL returning to Winnipeg.

The new Edmonton arena will cost $450 million. The city will provide $125 million (our city couldn’t provide $1.25) , the Katz Group will pay $100 million, $125 million will come from a user-pay facility fee and the final $100 million must be raised in the community (Bake sales? Lemonade stands?).

In Winnipeg, where it seems more and more likely that the Atlanta Thrashers could be purchased by True North Sports and Entertainment and moved here, one must always remember that MTS Centre cost a mere $133 million to build. It has 15,000-and-a-few seats (depending on who your talking to, on which day) and it’s smaller than the arena that Winnipeggers tore down (although it does have a very, very nice suite level). It’s quite a lovely building, but it’s a boutique arena – absolutely perfect for the American Hockey League and great musical events.

The Oilers owners, playing in a building with 17,100 seats plus standing room (at least 2,000 more seats than here in Winnipeg), claim they can’t make it anymore and have hinted at cocktail parties that they’ve even thought about moving to Quebec City if Quebec builds an arena and Edmonton doesn’t.

Meanwhile, here in Winnipeg, we’ve been inundated with rumours. It’s silly, really. There is the rumour IN Winnipeg that says the deal to buy the Thrashers will be done on Friday and then announced on Tuesday. And then there was the Thursday report in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution claiming that talks between the Atlanta Spirit Group and True North are ongoing, but are not close to a conclusion.

The reality is this: the private owners of True North Sports and Entertainment will either buy or not buy the available National Hockey League team in Atlanta. It’s their business and theirs alone.

But if they buy the Thrashers and move the team to Winnipeg, a city of approximately 700,000 people (the Edmonton Metropolitan Area has a population of 1,034,945) , how long will it be before we hear the cries: “We need a new arena?”

If we’re actually watching what’s going on in a bigger market with a bigger building, then one senses we’ll soon be hearing, “The arena isn’t big enough.”

The NHL is a very expensive proposition. What True North is negotiating is overwhelmingly risky. If they haven’t yet cut a deal to buy the Thrashers, I understand why.

In Winnipeg, hockey fans will not be the problem. However, smart people know that everything else might be.

 

Is It Just a Couple of Guys or are Hockey Players Really Stupid?

Dustin Glant is a 29-year-old pitcher from Indiana who now makes his home deep down in the Florida Keys at Marathon, Fla. He lives so far away from Winnipeg that he’s actually closer to Cuba than Miami.

Glant is in such a hurry to get to Winnipeg to pitch for the Goldeyes this season, he’s already driving north. One of the best pitchers in the now-defunct Northern League last season, Glant won 25 per cent of the games played by the Schaumburg Flyers. He was in-demand this off-season and said he only wanted to sign with one of three teams — Gary, Fargo or Winnipeg.

“Winnipeg was always at the top of my list and fortunately Rick (manager Forney) had a veteran’s spot open,” Glant said. “I’m 29 and my days of being signed by a team in organized baseball are probably behind me. So I want to win. I haven’t even been to the playoffs since 2004 so I was looking to play for a winner. I know that Gary, Fargo and Winnpeg all have great teams and I would have a chance to win on any one of those teams, but Winnipeg was my first choice because Winnipeg is such a great place to play.

“I’m good friends with Wes Long and he just raves about it. He says it’s great to be able to play in a place where you’re treated like a big leaguer. And it’s such a great city. There is so much to do.

“I know, when we played there with Schaumburg I always wanted to have the Friday night start so I could enjoy my weekend. Nobody wanted that Sunday afternoon start because you had to watch yourself. If I started on Friday night, I had the chance to start my weekend early and enjoy everything Winnipeg had to offer — the prettiest girls anywhere in the world, great night life and Kokanee Beer. That’s why I’m driving to Winnipeg. I want to have my car when I’m up there so I can enjoy Winnipeg on a day-off. I get the best of both worlds, a chance to play for a winner and a great place to play.”

This might be an unfair comparison because Dustin Glant is a professional athlete who has actually been to Winnipeg. He’s a smart guy who speaks well and actually knows what he’s talking about.

Then we get hockey players. First it was Eric Belanger and this week it was Ilya Bryzgalov.

According to Sun Media on Thursday, if it turns out that the Phoenix Coyotes do move north to Winnipeg, free-agent Bryzgalov says he won’t go.

“You don’t want to go to Winnipeg, right?” Bryzgalov told Sun Media on Wednesday. “Not many people live there, not many Russian people there (more than in Phoenix, Ilya). Plus it’s cold. There’s no excitement except the hockey. No park, no entertaining for the families, for the kids. It’s going to be tough life for your family.”

Bryzgalov is a free-agent so he has the right to play anywhere he wants. And frankly, I’d prefer to spend my winters in Orlando or Tampa. But to ‘diss a community when you’re absolutely ignorant about it — Winnipeg has always been known as “a great place to raise kids” — and you’re not the only one, is frightening. I really didn’t think hockey players were that stupid. I was wrong.

Can’t wait for Dustin Glant to arrive here in the ‘Peg. Ilya Bryzgalov? The last thing our community needs is another really ignorant rich guy.

 

What Happens if the Coyotes Don’t Move to Winnipeg?

We here at www.rivercitysportsblog.com have been taking a bit of heat for our cynicism.

While I believe Winnipeg will eventually get an NHL franchise, I’m just not sure it’s the Phoenix Coyotes of right now. It might be next year’s Coyotes. Heck, they might show up in Winnipeg in 2013, who knows? It’s just that there are so many young Winnipeggers who so desperately want to believe the Coyotes are coming right this minute that it’s easy to understand why they get so damned defensive when you suggest that maybe the announcement won’t be made for a while yet.

I know NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and I know he is going to do everything humanly possible to keep the Coyotes in Phoenix for as long as he possibly can. That’s just his style. So on Wednesday, when Bettman did the rounds of the Toronto radio shows, I wasn’t surprised to hear him suggest that maybe we should just hold our horses.

I know we’ve been told the Coyotes move to Winnipeg was “imminent” and I know we were told that seven weeks ago on TSN, but based on what I heard yesterday, I would think there are still a few more weeks– and maybe even a few more years — left.

“It’s not days and it’s not years. Obviously, we have to have this resolved before we release next year’s schedule,” Bettman told James Cybulski on TSN radio.

“It’s ironic: I know there were a whole spree of stories on Day 1 of this series that we had a deal, and we were just holding the announcement until when they were done playing. If the Coyotes lose tonight, I assure you I have no announcement to make, we have no deal, other than our efforts are still focused on trying to make it work in Phoenix. We had it done at one point, but the Goldwater Institute blew it up. We’re seeing what we can do. We still have time. I’m not going to tell you when time runs out, but obviously, the more time that elapses, the closer we get to the end, but we’re still hopeful we can make it work.”

When Cybulski asked Bettman if the league was prepared to operate as the club’s owner next season, providing the sale to Hulsizer didn’t go through, Bettman called it “unlikely,” unless the city of Glendale would take care of the financial losses for another season.

“That’s not the plan,” Bettman said. “I know this gets misreported also: they talk about ‘oh, the owners must be so upset because of the money we’re losing’. People tend to forget the city of Glendale is paying this year’s losses, not the NHL, not the clubs so ultimately, for that to happen, Glendale would have to be willing to do that again. But I think at some point, if this doesn’t come together, everybody is going to conclude that everything possible was done and it didn’t work. We’re hoping not to get to that point. And I still think there’s a significant chance that we won’t get to that point.”

Read that carefully: “…a significant chance that we won’t get to that point.”

That’s why I don’t think Bettman is in any hurry to cut a deal with Mark Chipman and David Thomson and move the team to Winnipeg.

And then there was this:

I don’t want to raise expectations (in Winnipeg), because it’s not fair to the fans,” Bettman said. “But if we have to move a franchise, there are places that have expressed interest that we would strongly consider and obviously, Winnipeg is on that list and probably very high on that list.”

Read that very carefully one more time. Bettman makes it clear that there are other cities involved in the bid to acquire the Phoenix Coyotes.

Frankly, at this stage, I don’t think Bettman’s bosses, the NHL’s American owners, are in any hurry to move a team from the United States to Canada. At least, not right now.

But then again, with the NHL, crazier things have happened.