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HOCKEY IN LAS VEGAS: NHL chills on expansion

League awards show coming, but no team on horizon

Surrounded by the Stanley Cup, Vezina Trophy and other coveted NHL awards as he spoke on the outdoor deck of The Palms' Ghostbar on a sun-splashed Monday afternoon, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman barely could contain his excitement about bringing the league's awards show to Las Vegas for the next three years.

"They've promised us parties all over the facility, one up here, one by the pool. They're going to make me feel 30 years younger," Bettman said.


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But Bettman wasn't nearly as hopeful about Las Vegas' chances to land an NHL team, and he all but erased the city's name from the list of potential future sites for the league's popular Winter Classic game.

"I've said it repeatedly: I think Las Vegas would make a great home for a professional sports team, but the stadium/arena issues need to be resolved before there can be serious consideration," he said. "The sense I get about the arena issue is, wherever it was a year ago, it's more distant (now) because of the economic downturn.

"You never know, but we have no plans to expand, and I don't think anybody does at this time."

Although league officials visited Las Vegas in January and said the city was on a list of potential future sites for the Winter Classic, Bettman said he couldn't see the game ever being played here.

"We had outdoor exhibition games here with the (Los Angeles) Kings (at Caesars Palace), but those were exhibition games," he said. "We've had enough trouble making sure the ice, which is created specially for the Winter Classic, is up to game conditions, because the Winter Classic counts. Looking at our standings, with 11 days left in the regular season, there were 11 playoff spots open, so every game really matters.

"In terms of game conditions, I don't think we can stage an NHL regular-season game in this beautiful climate."

The NHL Awards show, which is open to the public (for $500 a ticket), will take place June 18 at The Pearl theater at The Palms and, for the first time, the event will be broadcast live in the United States on Versus.

Bettman said one reason the league decided to move the show to Las Vegas was to create a "destination event" for its fans.

"This is an opportunity for us to open it more to the public," he said. "I have a sense people are going to want to travel here to attend the event, it's a larger theater, and it's an opportunity to make this a destination event for our fans."

Also, with the NHL Players Association holding its meetings here that week, Bettman expects a record turnout for the event, which will feature an after-party at The Palms' Rain nightclub.

"We're going to have record attendance for players, award winners and other celebrities," Bettman said. "I think (everyone is) going to have a terrific time."

Bettman also announced Monday that the NHL will team with Pokerstars.net and the NHLPA to present a celebrity/pro athlete charity poker tournament on June 17, the day before the awards ceremony.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority will pay the NHL about $650,000 per year to sponsor the event, and LVCVA president Rossi Ralenkotter hopes the relationship will lead to the city landing an NHL team.

"This is a great opportunity for us to showcase Las Vegas to the NHL, and hopefully that conversation will continue, as well as with other leagues, for a potential team," he said.

Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman also is hopeful that bringing the NHL Awards show to the city will be followed by bringing a franchise here.

"I think it's a big deal because it shows (the NHL) has no problems with Las Vegas as a destination," he said. "That's certainly an indication that when it's time to expand or for a franchise to move, there won't be any objection to having it in Las Vegas."

Contact reporter Todd Dewey at tdewey@ reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0354.

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RebCam wrote on April 08, 2009 12:15 PM: Joe, Teddy doesn't speak for everyone. I love hockey and have season tickets to the Wranglers (and did to the Thunder) and would love to have a pro team here.

Wranglers Fan, as far as not supporting a major professional franchise is concerned, it is hard to gauge if we could support the NHL here based on ticket sales for an ECHL team, but...since you brought it up, we do sell out the Orleans on occasion and we are consistently in the top 5 in attendance for the league every year. No team in the ECHL averages a sellout. The Runnin' Rebels aren't pro and they averaged 13,000 or so the past 3 years. (Yes, I know they have tenure in the city) But...that is more than enough of an average for an NHL team. Just take a look at average attendances in the NHL.

I don't understand you people. You'd rather shoot down the idea of major league sports in Las Vegas rather than supporting the idea. What might be a good idea is to look for reasons that it could happen (eventually) instead of finding every reason not to.


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Joe wrote on April 07, 2009 11:03 PM: Hey Teddy G, perhaps you'd like a real high scoring sport like Soccer to come to Vegas? Besides, hockey doesn't need or want Las Vegas.


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Wranglers Fan wrote on April 07, 2009 10:18 PM: I love to watch hockey and I love the Wranglers. But I don't see how we, as the city of Las Vegas and all the townships about, can support a professional hockey team or basketball. We have one of the best teams in the ECHL, constantly in the playoffs, making it to the finals last year, and we can't fill the Orleans for them. The media ocverage is poor. Oh who do we support?? A AAA baseball team that isn't doing anything exciting or a winning franchise in the Wranglers??? Yes, the baseball team. Yes, I know many people aren't hockey fans but until we show that we care for the team we have here, the NHL won't really look at us. An truth be known, I would rather just keep the Wranglers and be able to go watch athletes trying to get up to the pros instead of watching a pro team where it is a game of ME ME ME and million dollar cry babies.


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Teddy G wrote on April 07, 2009 08:24 PM: Is it me? I think hockey is, without a doubt, one of the most boring and painful sports to watch. You don't even get the thrill of cheering at many winning shots as hockey typically have high scores like "5".

Let's hold out for an NBA team. Las Vegas and basketball go hand in hand.


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JSF wrote on April 07, 2009 06:29 PM: Just build the arena in North LV. We can support the team up here.


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RebCam wrote on April 07, 2009 03:23 PM: Great response GH. I nice retort to yet another otherwise pessimistic blogger who doesn't know jack about the valley but yet has the all knowing opinion.

Not every casino is in the dumps all knowing one and you under estimate the rest of the city's ability to bring in revenue. Due you think that every person in this town works for a casino?

You went to lengths (again) to talk down the economy, which I already acknowledged, and then admitted that the recession won't last forever. No one here said that we should get a team tomorrow....but saying that there is zero chance for all the same phony reasons that I've been hearing for years is entirely proposterous, the economy notwithstanding.

So let me rephrase for ya Roger.....Eventually,....we won't be in a recession and there is a ton of money and backers in this city during economic splendor. Hell, the people who were going to invest in the new stadium weren't even residents.

I'm confident, despite it's constant retractors, that a stadium will be built and that a team will land here....even if you "don't think we will see the days of free and careless spending return to us soon".

Soon, in the economy's case, is not next week but....it's not 20 years either.


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GH wrote on April 07, 2009 01:04 PM: Las Vegas is a great place to live. I think it was that comment that players wouldn't want to live here that got the negative reaction. Las Vegas has great dining, clubs, shows, etc and once you get off the strip it is similar to any other town in the country. Lots of professional athletes already own homes in Las Vegas and we don't even have any teams. Why wouldn't NHL players want to live here?

Also the casinos would probably be the biggest backers of a pro team in Vegas and most likely pick up the tab to build the stadium on their property. The more fans they can bring in the more money they make off of rooms, food, bev, shops, and gaming.

Casinos are still spending billions on projects in LV so a few hundred million for a stadium may be a tough sell in todays economy but it isn't out of the question.


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JT wrote on April 07, 2009 10:02 AM: I don't see any professional sports team ever coming to Vegas. There's no money in it, not with the competition from all the casinos around here.


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Wings Fan wrote on April 07, 2009 09:31 AM: It's too bad they're NOT building the arena to house an NBA or NHL team. When CityCenter gets done or if MGM stops paying (whichever happens first) then 8,500 workers are going to bolt town and this place is going to be EMPTY. In fact, an arena that holds 23,000 people would be something this city could hang it's hat on. For as many concert venues as they have, Vegas doesn't have a BIG one yet. Kind of odd. I still hope the Maloofs move the Sacramento Kings here. (NBA team: Las Vegas Kings NHL team: Las Vegas Aces, oh that would rock.) But until the arena is built, don't expect the NBA or NHL here. And don't bring MLB here first. MLB needs to come 3rd. No domed stadium is going to work here in this economic downturn.


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roger wrote on April 07, 2009 09:07 AM: RebCam.... perhaps you can enlighten me.... LV/NV has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country.. right at the top of foreclosures and property depreciation...budget deficits at all levels of government...how do you get past the stadium issue? Who is going to pay for it? People in this area have taken a financial beating and selling them on a sports team as an investment for the future may not ring as the answer. We got any large corporations here willing to sponsor the stadium? Do I think we will be in a recession forever? No, but I don't think we will see the days of free and careless spending return to us soon either. Oh, and thanks for taking my comments so personal, always nice to know I can voice my opinions only to be berated by a true champion of LV like yourself.


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