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Report: NHL's sights on LV

Expansion franchise said to be in works

There's no such thing as a "lock" in Las Vegas, but the city is looking like a good bet to eventually land a team from one of North America's four major professional sports leagues.

That time might be close at hand, according to a report by SportsBusiness Daily on Wednesday.


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  • The report said the National Hockey League has been holding discussions with film and television producer Jerry Bruckheimer for months about owning a franchise here, amid speculation that the league is on the verge of proposing expansion to Las Vegas and Kansas City, Mo. -- the latter where the $276 million Sprint Center is slated to open in October.

    The Sprint Center was developed by Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), which owns and operates several major entertainment/sporting venues, including the Staples Center in Los Angeles and the Colosseum at Caesars Palace. Bruckheimer also has had discussions with AEG officials about the group building and/or operating an arena in Las Vegas, with an NHL team as its primary tenant, according to the report.

    AEG president and CEO Tim Leiweke wouldn't comment on the arena issue but was quoted by SportsBusiness Daily as saying, "Jerry is like a brother. I will be there to support him anywhere he wants to go."

    Bruckheimer heads a group of entertainment executives that appears to be a front-runner to land the Las Vegas expansion franchise, according to the report.

    Bruckheimer's publicist, Paul Bloch, told the Review-Journal, "We have no comment on it at all." But NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly confirmed discussions between the league and Bruckheimer in SportsBusiness Daily.

    "Bruckheimer is one of many people we have spoken to about their desire to own an team in Vegas," Daly said in an e-mail. "There have been many expressions of interest by a number of individuals and a number of cities."

    Daly added that "no decisions have been made" by the NHL Board of Governors about expanding the league from 30 to 32 teams and that "there's no 'agreement' with anyone" to own an expansion team.

    "I don't know if or when there might be an announcement," Daly wrote. "We will update the board on the expressions of interest we have received."

    Daly did not return an e-mail or phone call to the Review-Journal by press time.

    NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said last week during his annual news conference at the Stanley Cup Finals that the league had no interest in expanding. "At the present time we're not looking at expansion," he said. "At the present time we're not looking at relocation."

    Bruckheimer, 61, has produced such blockbuster movies as "Top Gun," "Remember the Titans" and the "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, and also created the hit television show "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation."

    An avid hockey fan, Bruckheimer has hosted his annual Bad Boys Invitational Hockey Tournament in Las Vegas for the past 12 years. The event features celebrities such as Cuba Gooding Jr., Kiefer Sutherland and Bruckheimer playing with and against NHL stars such as Jeremy Roenick and Chris Chelios.

    AEG is the world's largest owner of sports events and sports teams, including the NHL's Los Angeles Kings and the Los Angeles Galaxy and Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer, as well as holding interests in professional basketball's Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Sparks.

    There has been speculation for more than a year about Bruckheimer owning an NHL franchise. He attended a dinner at Staples Center in October 2006 with Leiweke and Bettman, with the purpose of discussing the possibility of him owning an NHL team in Las Vegas, according to Wednesday's report.

    The report also said AEG has a "standing offer" to Bruckheimer that the company would develop, operate and possibly own the arena in Las Vegas.

    AEG was one of seven developer-led entities that recently submitted letters of intent to build a new downtown arena, according to the report.

    Calls to AEG, Bill Rhoda -- a consultant for CSL International, which is managing the process for Las Vegas to select an arena developer -- and Mayor Oscar Goodman weren't returned Wednesday.

    The last four NHL expansion teams -- the Columbus Blue Jackets, Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators and Atlanta Thrashers -- paid expansion fees of $80 million each. Minnesota and Columbus were the most recent teams to join the league, beginning play in 2000-01.

    Tennessee businessman Craig Leipold nearly tripled the $80 million he paid for the Predators in 1997 when he sold the team in May for $220 million to Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie. That sale still must be approved by the NHL Board of Governors.

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    Report abuse

    Wancoure wrote on June 07, 2007 11:25 PM:
    Wow... Las Vegans sure are a bunch of whiny schmucks.


    Report abuse

    Dave wrote on June 07, 2007 05:51 PM: Wow - just keep dreaming Las Vegas. AIN'T GONNA HAPPEN!! As a long-time NHL fan and former player, I can tell you that the NHL is no position to be expanding. 1/2 of the teams are losing money in markets that have had teams for 50 years, do you think an expansion team will fare better? TV revenue and viewership is at an all-time low, player's salaries are out of control, the league is 2 steps from bankruptcy. As an expansion team, they would get the other teams castoffs as players, so for AT LEAST 5 years, they would have a horrible, losing record. This town DOES NOT support losing sports franchises. Yea, it would be considered 'cool' the first 2 or 3 months - probably sell out most of the time, but it would dwindle down to nothing. Any owner foolish enough to pay the money to get a team in Las Vegas deserves what he is going to get - "SEVEN OUT".


    Report abuse

    fanboy wrote on June 07, 2007 03:28 PM: Yup. Jus' wat we ned. A nuther redneck Nas-cak rase.


    Report abuse

    fred wrote on June 07, 2007 01:12 PM: The NHL does'nt need another franchise, if anything they need to retract. Las Vegas should work on getting another NASCAR event before they try to get an NHL team.


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    Lee Yarbrough wrote on June 07, 2007 12:36 PM: On the NHL web site they have stated that they do not plan on any expansion for four years or more at this time.

    The city needs to stay out of the entertainment business and leave arenas and sports to the people that do them best, the casinos. The city has proven with downtown that they don't know how to be in the entertainment business. As with most anything the government gets involved in, they have done nothing but lost money with their involvement with downtown.

    No taxpayer money should be used and the government should not be involved in the building of an arena.

    Sports are only supported in this town in casinos, not in arenas.


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    John wrote on June 07, 2007 12:24 PM: Las Vegas does NOT need a NHL team!! Why in the world would they? Has anybody heard that the NHL is no longer a sport of interest? Has nobody seen the rating the recent NHL finals got for NBC? People in Vegas "should" know, heck Poker has better TV ratings than the NHL.

    I'm sick of egomaniacs like Donald Trump and people like Bill O'Reilly telling everyone what they should say, do, and put up with. Looks like we can add this Brickheimer to the list of rich folk that think where and when they want to put their trash is what "we need" and what we need to accept. Oh yeah, isn't Dallas Mavericks owner Cuban bringing some rocket science of an idea of another "destined to fail" football league team here?

    Come on people, fight this idea and tell these rich egomaniacs to take their trash to Texas where rich oil people can sit and watch boring hockey. If there weren't any fights, nobody would even go. And we know Vegas gets enough REAL fights we don't need the fake Canadian types. Put this idea on ICE!!!


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    Joe wrote on June 07, 2007 12:12 PM: The NHL should eliminate teams in markets where hockey is not a primary sport, teams aren't even making a profit in most markets. Think more in the lines of baseball or eurpoean soccer where there are levels of competition, not a 32 team league where only 12 teams have a legitimate shot at winning the championship every year. Keep your farm team Vegas, not everything is a sure bet!


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    Chris wrote on June 07, 2007 10:00 AM: I MUCH prefer this to the possibility of an NBA franchise. Hopefully the NHL would attract a different type of audience than was experienced by the NBA all star game.


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    richard wrote on June 07, 2007 08:05 AM: Las Vegas should stick with minor league hockey.With the NHL your looking at hunded dollar seats and not affordable family fun.I have seen it happen on Long Island where we had the EHL Long Island Ducks. Along came the NHL where tickets were expensive and games were played before half empty seats. Keep the Wranglers and family fun.