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NHL Penguins to explore relocation

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Yahoo! Sports

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Lemieux: Penguins to explore relocation
By ALAN ROBINSON, AP Sports Writer
December 21, 2006



PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Pittsburgh Penguins are off the market, and owner Mario Lemieux says the team will look at relocating while it attempts to reach a deal for a new arena.

"It is time to take control of our own destiny," Hall of Famer Lemieux said in a statement issued by his team Thursday.

The Penguins are free to move when the 2006-07 season ends following a state panel's rejection Wednesday of a casino company's offer to build the team a new arena for free.

Lemieux said talks will begin shortly with state and local leaders about a new arena, but added a move outside Pennsylvania is another option.

"Accordingly, starting today, the team is off the market," Lemieux said, "and we will begin to explore relocation offers in cities outside Pennsylvania."

Among the cities known to be interested in the Penguins are Kansas City, Mo.; Houston; Portland, Ore.; and Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The Penguins, who have sought a new arena since Lemieux's group brought the team out of bankruptcy in 1999, have had two major setbacks in the last week.

Last Friday, Canadian businessman Jim Balsillie stunned the Penguins and the NHL by pulling out of an estimated $175 million agreement to buy the team. Balsillie was expected to close on the deal last week, only to back out after the NHL insisted he agree contractually to not move the team.

On Wednesday, a Pennsylvania gaming panel awarded the single license to build a slots machine parlor in Pittsburgh to Detroit-based gambling company owner Don Barden rather than a Penguins-supported gaming concern. Isle of Capri Casinos promised to build a $290 million arena for the Penguins next door to its casino if it was granted the slots parlor license.

While Isle of Capri could appeal the gaming board's decision, overturning the award could prove difficult because of language built into the state gaming law designed to prevent lengthy delays once the licenses were awarded.

Within an hour of the slots announcement, state, county and city leaders rushed to assuage the Penguins, promising to start talks immediately on a so-called Plan B agreement to build the arena. A site has already been secured, and the Barden group has pledged $7.5 million a year for 30 years to help fund the arena. The state also would kick in $7 million.

Allegheny County Chief Executive Dan Onorato and Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl said they were ready to negotiate an arena deal immediately and were certain an agreement could be reached. Both said Thursday they were disappointed the Penguins have not yet moved to meet with them.

Maybe that's because the Penguins would have to contribute money to the Plan B deal -- something they weren't required to do by Isle of Capri.

Lemieux, exasperated the Penguins still don't have a replacement for 45-year-old Mellon Arena, warned Monday that there would be considerable uncertainty if Plan B became the only option. But, until now, he has not actively sought offers from other cities.

"I'm not sure about Plan B," Lemieux said. "Plan B, in my opinion, is going to use taxpayers' money. I've never heard of a government turning down $290 million in private money to build a public facility. It's unheard of. At this point, frankly, I'm really not sure of what's going to come of it."

While the Penguins were discouraged by the Isle of Capri's failure to obtain the slots license, they are now in position to negotiate a more favorable arena agreement.

Lemieux can use relocation as a powerful bargaining chip, and thus apply even more pressure on government officials to reach a deal quickly. Privately, Lemieux group executives have said the team would relocate only if it became certain there would be no new arena.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman met recently in Pittsburgh with Onorato and Ravenstahl, presumably to discuss how Plan B would work if the Isle of Capri wasn't chosen. Onorato and Ravenstahl also called Bettman following the gaming board decision.

Despite the Penguins' long-standing arena issues, Pittsburgh remains one of the NHL's strongest U.S. markets. The Penguins, who have no NBA team in town to draw away attention and fans, played to 92 percent of arena capacity last season, despite a fourth consecutive last-place finish.

Ticket sales are strong for the rest of this season. TV ratings also are among the highest of any U.S. city.

Bettman's desire to keep the Penguins in Pittsburgh is one reason he wouldn't allow the sale to go through without strong contract language that prevented Balsillie from moving the team.

Pittsburgh's other two major sports teams, the Steelers and Pirates, also gained their new stadiums in 2001 following similar Plan B negotiations with political leaders. The original plan to fund the stadiums through a county sales tax hike was overwhelmingly rejected by voters.
 
I rather suspect that Buttman and buddies in NYC don't want them moved to a 2nd or 3rd tier Canadian city- however I'm sure 'anywhere' in the great Excited States would be deemed a step forward for pro hockey. KW never had a chance and good luck Winnipeg.
 
If the NHL can't work in a second-tier city in the US northeast, how the hell is it supposed to work in a second-tier city in the south, like Nashville, Phoenix, Raleigh, Tampa?

Hamilton will be very likely profitable, as ML$E prices too many out of the market, and the Golden Horseshoe has a strong market and a large and growing population.

K-W is interesting, but yeah right. Winnipeg is a bit more likely, after all Minnesota got a team back.
 
Kansas city keeps coming up here and there.

Hamilton, no. But Kansas City, another notable American hockey capital.
 
^ It looks like K.C. will be the new home for Sid the Kid. K.C. already has the Sprint Center, scheduled to be completed in October 2007 and is expected to seat 18,500 people and have 72 suites. K.C. already has a prospective owner for an NHL team in William “Boots†Del Biaggio III, a San Jose, Calif., venture capitalist who has signed an agreement with Anschutz Entertainment Group, manager of the Sprint Center, to own and operate an NHL franchise in Kansas City when one becomes available.
During the summer of 2005, Del Biaggio had reached an agreement to purchase the Pittsburgh franchise from Mario Lemieux, a partner of his in a junior hockey club in Omaha, but the Penguins took the team off the market after it won the rights to the No. 1 pick in the draft, center Sidney Crosby.

If this happens, I hope K.C. takes the Red Wings spot in the Central Division. Move the Red Wings to the Northeast Division with the Leafs and move the Bruins to the Atlantic Division with the other N.Y. area teams.

As much as I would love to see another NHL team in Canada, Bettman and other team owners are still holding out hope for a big U.S. T.V. or cable package.
 
Mississauga Hazels, anyone? If LA and NY can have suburban teams, why not Toronto?
 
Gary Bettman of the NBA is probably the worst thing to happen to the NHL - with the possible exception of the 1976 Philadephia Flyers, and Harold Ballard.

Bettman thought he could make the NHL like the NBA - megaexpansion, huge marketing and endorsement opportunities, new teams with stupid names and cartoony logos, faster and more appealing to the hicks in Dixie.

Time to move on. NHL probably never should have been pushed in every southern US market possible - only the biggest markets, like SJ/SF, LA, Dallas, maybe Atlanta. The NHL should be a 24 or 26 team league, with 7 or 8 in Canada, and stop trying to get those national TV rights - OLN is embarrasing.
 
The Globe

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alsillie tells Lemieux he's still interested in Pens

Canadian Press

Pittsburgh — Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie has apologized to Mario Lemieux and says he still wants to buy the Pittsburgh Penguins.

In a letter to team owner Lemieux, Balsillie said he is ready to begin negotiations right away and urged quick action to avoid a sale to another buyer who would automatically move the team to another city.

"Despite recent difficulties, I continue to be very interested in the team and in working towards an arena deal that is a benefit to the team and to the City of Pittsburgh," Balsillie said.

The head of BlackBerry maker Research in Motion invited Lemieux to go "arm and arm with me" to commissioner Gary Bettman to "make one last effort to get a deal done."

Balsillie, who abruptly pulled out of a $175 million (U.S.) deal to buy the club last week, opened his letter with an apology to Lemieux, saying he regretted "that you have interpreted our inability to reach an agreement as an offence to you or the team.

"That was certainly never my intent and I apologize."

The letter was published Friday in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Balsillie could not immediately be reached for comment.

Lemieux said Monday the Penguins were "shocked and offended" that Balsillie withdrew his offer.

The withdrawal came prior to a Pennsylvania gaming board vote that was to determine whether a new arena was built for the 40-year-old franchise.

Lemieux added that he would keep Balsillie's deposit and said that "the deal with Mr. Balsillie is dead."

The Penguins had another setback on Wednesday, when the gaming board voted unanimously to award Pittsburgh's slots machine license to PITG Gaming, rather than Isle of Capri Casinos.

Isle of Capri was committed to building a $290 million arena next to a casino if it got the slots license. The new building would replace the 45-year-old Mellon Arena, the NHL's oldest rink.

After the vote, Lemieux announced that the Penguins were off the market and he would consider relocating the team to another city, although he would continue to seek other ways to have an arena built in Pittsburgh.

Balsillie pulled out of negotiations when the NHL insisted he agree in writing not to move the club even if the Isle of Capri arena deal fell through.

In his latest letter, Balsillie said he was ready to start negotiating Plan B.

"On our side all the papers have been signed and everything is in place to close our transaction immediately but for the NHL Consent Agreement," said Balsillie. "However, we must move quickly."

Plan B scenarios to finance a new rink are under discussions at various levels of government and with the winner in the slots license competition, Don Bardon.

The Penguins' lease at Mellon Arena expires in June, after which the team is free to leave.

Other cities interested in landing an NHL club include Kansas City, Las Vegas, Houston, Portland, Ore., and Winnipeg.

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Bettman, Balsillie discussed Hamilton NHL team

PAUL WALDIE

Globe and Mail Update

Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie approached the National Hockey League about locating a franchise in Hamilton last March, but was told he would have to build a new arena, according to several sources.

Balsillie and a team of bankers met with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman in New York to discuss a possible franchise in the Ontario city. At the time, sources say, Balsillie planned to run an NHL club out of Copps Coliseum.

According to several people familiar with the meeting, Bettman said the league would have to explore the idea, but he added that the NHL did not want to "pile franchises on top of each other." Bettman also said the league would not even consider putting a team in the Copps arena, which seats about 17,000. Instead, Balsillie would have to build a new arena.

When Balsillie put in an offer to buy the Pittsburgh Penguins a few months later, league officials asked him whether he planned to move the team to Hamilton. Sources say Balsillie had dropped the idea by then and told Bettman he had no plans to pull the Penguins out of Pittsburgh.

Sources also say Balsillie has no plans to build an arena in the Kitchener-Waterloo area. Balsillie co-runs Research In Motion Ltd., based in Waterloo, Ont.

Balsillie withdrew his $175-million (all figures U.S.) offer for the Penguins last week, citing last-minute conditions imposed by the league restricting his ability to control the club. Bill Daly, the league's deputy commissioner, rejected that characterization and said the conditions "were all things that had been discussed with Mr. Balsillie and his representatives repeatedly throughout the process."

Complicating matters for the Penguins was a decision this week by a Pennsylvania state gaming agency that rejected an application for a slot machine licence from a company called Isle of Capri. The company had promised to build a new arena for the Penguins if it won the licence. The club's lease at its current venue, the Mellon Arena, will expire next summer. With Isle of Capri's application gone, state officials said they are ready to pursue "Plan B," which involves the government and the Penguins financing construction of a new building.

The club's owners, who include Mario Lemieux, said Thursday that Balsillie's withdrawal and the gaming commission decision "have convinced us that it is time to take control of our own destiny.

"Accordingly, starting Thursday, the team is off the market, and we will begin to explore relocation options in cities outside Pennsylvania," Lemieux said in a statement.

Balsillie could not be reached Thursday, but he has said he is still interested in making another bid for the team and working on Plan B. Sources say the league is prepared to deal with Balsillie again and that he is trying to mend fences. But the current owners may not be as eager. Lemieux said this week he was "shocked and offended" by Balsillie's withdrawal.
 
I think it'd work in Winnipeg, Quebec or K/W/Hamilton. But I think Portland, KC, and Houston are more attractive to the NHL?
 
I've lost a lot of interest in the league over the last few years despite the new rules which have improved the flow of the games a bit. There are too many teams in marginal US markets right now- too many teams and too many games. When I turn on the TV and see tampa and columbus and raleigh and NAshville and San Jose and anaheim and...I turn the channel. I don't see how the NHL can see a team in Columbus or any of the afore mentioned cities an improvement over Winnipeg, or Quebec, or indeed Halifax. Hell-there's pro-football in Green bay? It's all about selling (out?) to the Americans.
 
Globe

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Lemieux to meet with Kansas City officials

Associated Press

Pittsburgh — Mario Lemieux and other members of the Penguins' ownership group met with Kansas City officials on Wednesday, increasing speculation that the team might leave Pittsburgh.

Michael Roth, a spokesman for Los Angeles-based Anschutz Entertainment Group, which will operate the new Sprint Center, issued a statement Wednesday confirming that meetings were scheduled with the ownership group of the Pittsburgh Penguins and his organization.

Company officials declined to comment further, but a news conference was planned for Thursday in Kansas City.

The team's future became unclear last month after its sale to Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie fell through and the state Gaming Control Board denied Isle of Capri Casino a slots licence.

Isle of Capri had promised to build a US$290 million arena for the Penguins if its bid was approved.

Lemieux said the team, which had been up for sale, was taken off the market following the failed Isle of Capri bid. He and partner Ron Burkle said they would begin considering relocation offers from cities outside of Pennsylvania.

"We are meeting with officials in Kansas City today as part of our effort to explore all of our options regarding a new arena," Lemieux said in a statement. "We have heard many great things about their new building, which is scheduled to open in time for the start of the 2007-08 NHL season."

Pittsburgh plays in the 45-year-old Mellon Arena, the NHL's oldest venue, and would have to stay there for several more years even if a new arena deal in Pittsburgh could be reached. The franchise's current lease expires in June.

The $276 million Sprint Center is under construction and set to open in the fall. The facility, which will seat about 18,000, is searching for an anchor tenant but has already sold out its 72 luxury suites. The arena is a public-private partnership between the city and Anschutz Entertainment Group, which also manages the NHL's Kings and STAPLES Center.

A deal to bring the team to Kansas City would almost certainly involve venture capitalist William (Boots) Del Biaggio III, who has a contract to own any NHL team based at the Sprint Center. Del Biaggio is a limited partner of the San Jose Sharks and part owner with Lemieux of the United States Hockey League's Omaha Lancers. He nearly bought the Penguins in 2005.

Messages left with Del Biaggio's office in Menlo Park, Calif., were not immediately returned.

Kansas City is believed to be the first city to extend an invitation for a visit to Lemieux and the Penguins' ownership team. Other cities that have expressed interest in the Penguins are Houston; Winnipeg; Portland, Ore.; and possibly Oklahoma City.

Lemieux and Burkle were scheduled to meet late Thursday with Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, Allegheny County Chief Executive Dan Onorato and Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl.

The sides will likely discuss an improved Plan B agreement, which involves Detroit-based gambling company owner Dan Barden.

It was Barden's Majestic Star Casino that beat out Isle of Capri for the Pittsburgh's only slot machine parlour licence. The Barden group has pledged $7.5 million a year for 30 years to help fund a new arena. The state would also pay $7 million and the franchise would be responsible for 20 per cent of the cost.

Kansas City failed in its only attempt to support an NHL franchise.

The Scouts started strong in 1974, drawing about 15,000 fans to their first game. But the team was plagued by mismanagement and was grossly under-financed. Average attendance fell to about 7,300 within a year.

*****

The Sprint Centre looks pretty interesting. I guess this might be how you would design an arena using the "Toronto Style". Having natural lighting for the interior of the arena is a nice touch, but I wonder what effects it would have on the fans and players.

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The $276 million Sprint Center is under construction and set to open in the fall. The facility, which will seat about 18,000, is searching for an anchor tenant but has already sold out its 72 luxury suites. The arena is a public-private partnership between the city and Anschutz Entertainment Group, which also manages the NHL's Kings and STAPLES Center

too bad about Pittsburgh.

this sounds like a good opp. though. Kansas City is a proven sports town with the Chiefs and Royals.
 
That sprint center looks great. Would love to have that here. Minus that big square thing sticking out the side.
 

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