The recently announced sale of the National Hockey League’s Arizona Coyotes and the team’s move to Utah could lead to bond issuances for arena projects in both states.
Under a plan approved by the NHL Board of Governors last week, the team, which had been unable to secure a permanent arena in Arizona, was sold to the Smith Entertainment Group and relocated to Salt Lake City, while Coyotes’ former owner Alex Meruelo was granted the right to reactivate the franchise if a state-of-the-art hockey arena is constructed within five years.
Ryan Smith, whose company already owns the National Basketball Association’s Utah Jazz, told reporters at an NHL press conference Friday he is seeking to renovate the Delta Center in downtown Salt Lake City to accommodate both sports.
“We want it all to be together and we want it downtown,” he said, noting the Delta Center “has good bones.”
The as-yet-unnamed former Coyotes will play next season in the Delta Center, but the building’s basketball-first layout means many seats have obstructed views of the hockey ice surface, which is twice as long as a basketball court.
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“It’s going to take the county, it’s going to take the city from a tax standpoint but we’ll generate a lot of revenue,” Smith said. “I think down the road everyone will look back and go ‘wow like at a time when we needed to revitalize and reimagine (downtown Salt Lake City) we invested and it worked out.'”
Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall called the team’s move a defining moment in the city’s trajectory.
“This is the beginning of a new era that will generate exciting opportunities for our communities, amplify pride and unlock new potential in our downtown core,” she said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Meruelo is pushing ahead to meet the NHL’s deadline to return professional hockey to Arizona, starting with a plan to bid on land in north Phoenix at an Arizona State Land Department June auction.
“My goal will be to build a first-class sports and entertainment district without seeking financial support from the public,” Meruelo said at a separate NHL press conference. “No taxpayer dollars, no tax breaks.”
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Meruelo Group did not return a call requesting information about the arena plan.
After
Tempe voters last year rejected Meruelo’s
The Coyotes were launched after the franchise moved from Winnipeg, Canada, in 1996. In 27 seasons in the desert, the team