The National Hockey League could use an epic final game tonight, and by epic we mean multiple overtimes and an outcome that either provides the Florida Panthers torrents of mockery for decades to come, or redeems the Panthers, reprieves Calgarians, and earns Connor McDavid the saddest Conn Smythe Trophy presentation in history.
The NHL could also use a big finale to further obscure the disastrous end of hockey in Arizona and the final repudiation of Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo.
It is nearly unprecedented for a community to rise as one and say, “We prefer no team to your team,” and is rarer still for politicians to not only back away from the trough of construction projects but tip the trough over and walk through the remains. Yet it happened Friday when the Arizona State Land Department canceled a land auction scheduled for this coming Thursday that Meruelo needed to revive his comatose franchise. The decision was the latest in a series of groinal slapshots to Meruelo’s hope for an NHL-acceptable arena for the currently inactive ‘Yotes, after being evicted from the one they had in Glendale and having to play the past two years at Arizona State’s mini-facility, and summarized what pols in the valley and most of their constituents have been saying for years now: they love the kachina but they kind of hate Alex. Kind of a lot, actually.
The team itself is saved by its escape to Salt Lake City and new sugar daddy Ryan Smith, the billionaire owner of the Utah Jazz, so eager to have a team that he hasn’t found time to name it. This has been discussed in other Defector treatises, but whether the nickname ends up being Yeti, Yeti, or the longshot choice, Yeti, it shows one additional facet of the Coyotes disaster: teams being moved in a hurry and reassembled before the marketing chuckleheads can get up to speed.
The old town, though, is also getting what it wants: no money spent on no arena and no conciliatory gestures toward the guy who wanted it.
The team that currently exists solely as a Twitter account issued a spicy release vaguely threatening legal action under what one can only assume is the divine right of owners to get whatever they want from malleable politicians and gullible taxpayers. The exact terminology was “considering our legal options,” which if it doesn’t mean “nothing” means a search for a judge who doesn’t mind issuing the odd injunction for snicks and giggles. If one is found, that is still a long way from overcoming the city and…
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