Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION

Don't get too worked up, Winnipeg: Bettman

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Even though NHL commissioner Gary Bettman acknowledges time is running short on the Phoenix Coyotes sale, he doesn't want fans in Winnipeg to start getting excited just yet.

The league has had the right to start exploring relocation options since Dec. 31, but Bettman says he's still hopeful the proposed sale to Matthew Hulsizer will go through soon. Winnipeg is a possible destination if that deal falls apart.

"We'll hang in there as long as it makes sense and as long as we can," Bettman said Saturday before the NHL's skills competition. "But time is getting short. Make no mistake about that. This is not something that is of infinite duration. I have tried to be as careful as I could be not to raise expectations in Winnipeg.

"Everybody knows my view on that -- if we have to move a club, it would be good to go back to a place that we were once in that has a different situation, vis-a-vis building and ownership and the like, but it's one of the reasons we get concerned.

"We think it's unfair when baseless stories come out suggesting things that aren't true to get people in Winnipeg all excited. If there's something to announce, I promise we'll announce it."

The NHL has been running the Coyotes for 15 months after a U.S. bankruptcy judge ruled the league, and not billionaire Jim Balsillie, could purchase the team. The NHL paid US$140 million and is reported to be selling it to Hulsizer for about $170 million.

The last thing the league wants to do is run the franchise again next season so a deal will have to be in place by the time the 2011-12 schedule is being completed in the spring or early summer. Bettman has not given Hulsizer a deadline to complete the sale.

"I know it would satisfy everybody's sense of finality to announce a drop-dead date," he said. "As long as the process is holding together in a timeframe that we can deal with, a schedule and the like, we're going to hang in there. If it becomes clear that the train is off the rails or that the train isn't getting to the station any time soon then we'll have to re-evaluate our position.

"But we're not going to, by a matter of a day or two, just simply make an artificial date."

 

-- The Canadian Press

Players prefer Quebec City

Sorry Winnipeg, but if and when the NHL expands (or relocates a team) to Canada, Quebec City is the players' choice.

That's according to poll of 318 NHL players released Sunday by the NHL Players' Association.

Although commissioner Gary Bettman reiterated his stance that the NHL has no immediate plans to expand or relocate a team, players thought that if Canada were to land another franchise the Quebec capital should be the place. Quebec City, which lost the Nordiques when they moved to Colorado in 1995, received 53 per cent of the vote. Winnipeg, which lost the Jets when they left for Phoenix in 1997, was second with 25 per cent. There was 16 per cent support for a second team in Toronto, while Hamilton received 25 per cent support.

 

-- Postmedia News

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 31, 2011 C3

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