@Coyotes de l'Arizona

Quelle est la prochaine étape pour les Coyotes de l’Arizona? (Vote Tempe vs Déménagement)



La candidature des Coyotes de l’Arizona pour un nouvel aréna semble caduque. Lors de la première publication des résultats du référendum, les électeurs de la banlieue de Phoenix, à Tempe, étaient fermement opposés à trois propositions de construction d’un quartier de divertissement de 2,3 milliards de dollars qui comprendrait une nouvelle arène pour les Coyotes. L’opposition aux trois propositions avait une avance à deux chiffres sur les partisans. « La Ligue nationale de hockey est terriblement déçue par les résultats du référendum public concernant le projet d’aréna des Coyotes à Tempe », a déclaré le commissaire de la LNH, Gary Bettman. « Nous allons examiner avec les Coyotes quelles pourraient être les options à l’avenir. » Le vote a eu lieu après que la ville de Phoenix et l’aéroport international de Sky Harbor ont exprimé leurs inquiétudes concernant les résidences faisant partie du projet dans une zone très bruyante sous la trajectoire de vol de l’aéroport. Les Coyotes avaient espéré qu’une nouvelle arène à Tempe permettrait enfin à la franchise de s’installer après avoir joué dans trois lieux différents depuis son déménagement en Arizona. MA CHAINE AVIATION ✈️ http://brodie.bz/Aviation HOME STUDIO PRO 🎥 http://brodie.bz/Production 📺 Abonnez-vous ➡️ http://brodie.bz/YouTube 📸 Instagram ➡️ http://brodie.bz/IG 📰 Fonctionnalités ➡️ http://brodie.bz/Read 🎧 Podcast ➡️ http://brodie.bz/Apple ✳️ Spotify ➡️ http://brodie.bz/Spotify 🐦 Twitter ➡️ http://brodie.bz/TW 👍 Facebook ➡️ http://brodie.bz/FB #nhl #hockey #arizona

43 Comments

  1. Why not move to Utah? as a bay area transplant i would love to see nhl here , love to see my Sharks here.

  2. How about this as a counter-proposal to the citizens of Tempe: The city pays for the $73M clean-up of the landfill and the Coyotes cover the rest, including paying property taxes just like other citizens and businesses in Tempe do? Sneaky move by the Coyotes to say "give us $240M in taxes and well pay $73M in landfill cleanup".

  3. According to reporting by Katie Strang of The Athletic back in August 2021, Glendale City manager Kevin Phelps informed the arena's management company, ASM Global, that the team owed $1,462,792 to the arena. “We’ve reached that point of no return,” Phelps said in an interview with The Athletic. “There’s no wavering.” So it appears as if bills were not being paid and, as a result, the City of Glendale decided not to renew the Coyotes lease. Also, I believe the Coyotes also wanted the City to pay for renovations to the arena.

  4. You'd think that citizens who really want NHL hockey in the city would be very motivated to turn out and vote in favor of at least one of the three proposals, but it appears non-hockey fans are opposed to giving the Coyotes special property tax treatment along with another $240M in taxes, and they are Tempe citizens too. Like any other election, it's up to the two parties (Coyotes and those opposed to all three plans) to spread their message in an effort to win the majority of citizens who care enough to turn out and vote.

  5. The Coyotes have been a dumpster fire. Time to move to Houston. How is it that if Phoenix wanted to keep the team they couldn’t play in the same arena as the Suns?

  6. The coyotes should've been the team sold to the group from Winnipeg. Atlanta had a viable market, just needed new owners. Arizona has never been viable

  7. Brodie when I lived in Houston we went through the Oilers demanding a stadium after the city had renovated the Astrodome. Of course they relocated to Memphis and finally Nashville. Houston was fortunate to get the Texans.

  8. The San Jose Sharks will probably be looking for some free money soon. They’re all pain in the ass.

  9. Well, kicked from Glendale and Tempe rejects them… Try in Phoenix and Scottsdale before considering to leave the marker altogether… Maybe Houston, KC, or SLC… Although I want Portland and maybe some Wisconsin city too, and also QC…

    🤔🤔🤔

  10. The Coyotes were evicted from Gila River Arena because they failed to make their tax payments to the City of Glendale. The Coyotes have limped along from the first day they arrived from Winterpeg, Manitscoldout, hampered by greedy owners who chose the dollar over everything else. If the NHL had any sense at all they would have stopped beating this dead horse when they were booted out of Gila River, but the NHLs owners aren't going to let these losers take a viable expansion city, and the $600M+ fee that goes with it, away. As for Scottsdale, who in their right mind would give this incompetent group, the Coyotes owners and the NHL's owners, $740M+ for the privilege of having this 3-ring circus pitch it's tent? Any city that pays for a pro team to stay, whether through tax breaks or a new venue, deserves the pox they've brought upon their house.
    Brodie, it's obvious that hockey usually isn't on your radar. For the last 5 years, anytime anyone mentions the Coyotes they mention Houston as well.

  11. They should have stayed in the Phoenix Suns arena it would have made sense even though what's wasn't made for hockey and still would have been a better situation in my opinion

  12. I think Houston is the only option cuz the others go against the reasoning of why Bettman kept the Coyotes in Arizona for so long.
    The market size alone rules out SLC, KC, and SAC. ATL failed twice and QC requires realignment.
    I’m a Coyotes (D-Backs too) fan who became jaded by the team after the Chayka era and it stings but to be honest it’s not like I didn’t see this coming.

  13. I like it when the people say "F U" to an owner like they did in Tempe, as opposed to what the A's and Raiders did to Oakland.

  14. Once the Coyotes leave AZ that market is gonna be open. I’m a vgk fan and we need as much mountain west states on our small market fan base as possible lol. Move to Quebec, not KC please!!

  15. it's insane that the voters looked at a literal toxic dump versus a potential entertainment district and chose the toxic dump. it was such a sweetheart deal stolen away by a smear campaign built out of misinformation by Phoenix. a real shame

  16. This is public money that should be put to public services. Why in America do the teams expect so much from money from public sources? The teams always will say we can always move but Cities should start saying no.

  17. As a former season ticket holder for the Coyotes, who now lives in New Jersey… it's time to pull the plug on metro Phoenix. Houston is logical, Quebec City is sentimental, Scottsdale was tried… look up the Los Arcos Mall plan. America West Area had poor sight lines way back in the day. The support was Luke warm from the beginning. There was hardly a time I went to a game that Coyotes fans were in the majority…. and that goes back to day one. There is not a huge hockey fan base in "The Valley"… sometimes something is just not meant to be, this is one of those somethings.

  18. So the voters are morons and we should rely on our elected officials? Look what your elected officials got you in Oakland….

  19. These sports teams demand money because they can, There are now more cities that can support or, at least, want franchises. Therefore, more and more teams are holding de facto auctions for who can make the biggest offer.

    I wasn't a fan of corporate welfare when the Ravens (then Browns) tried to extort a new stadium from Cleveland, And, at the time, the Browns were still selling out 5 or 6 of their 8 home games in the massive dump that was Cleveland Municipal Stadium but it had no luxury boxes…

    I voted against the funding for Bridgestone Arena and Nissan Stadium in Nashville in the mid-90s. I showed my support for the Predators by going to games until the games got more expensive than I was willing to pay, even though I was able.

    Kudos to the people of Tempe for not paying the "protection money" to the Coyotes.

  20. Sacramento was brought up. Let’s bring them to the capital and let’s have another Northern California rivalry going on.

  21. There's still a future for the Coyotes in Arizona. Mat Ishbia could help the team stay in Phoenix and play at the same arena as the Suns. Given that players like Auston Matthews have grown in the state the NHL would like to stay in Arizona. Going back to the A's situation it's important for the A's to return to being a competitive team whether that's in Oakland or in Vegas. Just like the Coyotes there is still a good possibility of the club staying.

  22. While I know it’s very unlikely I hope the Coyotes move to San Francisco, Oakland, or Sacramento

  23. I feel for Arizona, I really do, but to be honest, looking at all the potential cities, Atlanta has the most favorable number of potential fanbase. While Houston does have a slightly larger metropolitan area population, it has a smaller white population than metro Atlanta.

    I recently looked up the data for 2021 (estimates), and compared the white population between Atlanta and Houston.

    Neither metropolitan area has a particularly high white percentage, but Atlanta does have almost 300,000 more white people than Houston.

    As of 2021, metro Atlanta had 297,713 more white people than metro Houston. While this may not seem a lot, it does play a minor difference. Furthermore, when looking at each metro area, Atlanta's northside is far more white and a larger area with a higher concentration of white people, compared to Houston's Montgomery County which has some mostly white areas, but it isn't as concentrated and as spread out, except near the Woodlands, by and large.

    Furthermore, Atlanta's sports teams outperform in attendance every single Houston team. The Braves have higher attendance than the Astros. The Falcons have higher attendance than the Texans. The Hawks have higher attendance than the Rockets. The United have higher attendance than the Dynamo.

    Furthermore, I'm fairly certain that Atlanta has a considerably larger hockey fan base than the Houston area does.

    While I do think Houston should get a team, I don't think that they should be favored over Atlanta by any means.

  24. Bring them to Oakland and create and great hockey market in the Bay Area like it is in SoCal.

  25. As an avid sports fan and casual coyotes fan, i see alot of people put out opinions that are uneducated and shallow. They are people not from AZ. There are many reasons why prop 301 302 and 303 were shot down by 56% majority by tempe voters. 1st reason, old people vote, arizona is where alot of old people retire too and they didn't want to deal with extra traffic during gamedays on top of normal traffic from being geographically between phoenix, scottsdale and mesa. 2nd reason, lawsuits, Sky Harbor Airport has pending litigation due to Tempe Entertainment District construction height will impede flights to and from Phoenix. 3rd reason, fatigue, anybody whos been in AZ longer than 2 years knows about the bad history of coyotes and how city of glendale is still paying the cost for a stadium built in the early 2000s. Its time for them to go, stop using good taxpayer dollars to support millionaire owners. Let them leave, i played nhl 95 on sega, it would be nice to see hartford whalers and the quebec nordiques again. Brodie Brazil it would be better for you to interview someone who knows what they are talking about than to go lead a ramble on that leads to nowhere. Last scottsdale will not work EVER, Los Arcos was shot down by the city a long time ago. Google it. Theres a reason why that city is well liked by many people and its not sports.

  26. I’m going to be moving to Phoenix and if the Coyotes got the arena vote. Then the arena would be about a mile away from the airport. Maybe the Suns new owner, could maybe purchase the team and get them to play at the footprint center.

  27. Brodie, I appreciate all the research that you do when doing the podcast. Also in Phoenix, the Diamondbacks want a new stadium/ dome as well. Maricopa county needs to work with the sports teams to see how they can make things work in getting new stadiums/ domes

  28. The biggest problem is very simple: the city in the Valley that the team and the fans would most like them to relocate to (Scottsdale) doesn't want them – and probably never really will work out a deal with them (past or future).
    And, because they really need ownership of the arena, the place where they'd love to build is out because it's not owned by the city (Talking Stick, which is owned by the Salt River Pima Indian Community).
    Ironically, like you've mentioned about the city of Oakland "settling" on the Coliseum site, the Coyotes might have to "settle" on the site of what used to be one of the largest shopping malls in the Valley – the Fiesta Mall in Mesa.
    I'd personally love it (it's practically in my backyard), but I'm not sure the fans would want to drive down the 60/101 to games – especially when the 60 (aka Superstition Freeway) is definitely showing its age.

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