LeBlanc: Coyotes Have Chosen Site For New Arena

24 June 2016

Coyotes president and CEO Anthony LeBlanc said Thursday afternoon that the team has chosen a site for its new arena and is working through the legal documentation of the real estate agreement.

LeBlanc declined to provide any other details, or name the site, but the previously reported potential sites include one at the intersection of the 101 and 202 freeways just north of Tempe Marketplace, one on the campus of Arizona State University on its newly-created athletic district where Karsten Golf Course currently sits, one along the 101 corridor in Scottsdale —  across from Talking Stick Resort — and downtown, although Suns owner Robert Sarver is a major stumbling block to a Phoenix site.

ASU officials could not be reached for comment to determine whether they are partnering with the Coyotes. LeBlanc expects to provide an update of progress on Friday; not a formal announcement since there are details yet to be finalized.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said Wednesday from the league’s awards show that he is confident the arena search is moving in a positive direction.

“I think they have an enormously good and valuable opportunity to get a new arena in a place that will work much better than what they’ve had,” Bettman said.

The Coyotes’ lease agreement with Gila River Arena expires after next season. It is unclear whether the Coyotes would be able to sign a short-term extension with Glendale and arena manager AEG, given their contentious relationship with the city, but Bettman said he is not concerned about how the team will bridge the gap between the end of next season and when a new arena is built.

“The key will be: get the new arena and then we’ll figure out where they play in the meantime,” Bettman said. “That’s the tail; not the dog.”

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly expressed similar sentiments.

“The ownership group continues to be extremely positive that something’s going to get done, something’s going to get done in the relative short term and what’s going to get done is going to be a huge improvement over their current situation,” Daly said, before addressing where the Coyotes would play while the arena is being built. “There are always alternatives. If you have the long-term solution in place you find a way to get to the long-term solution. There’s never going to be something that would preclude us from bridging from here to there.”

 

Source : arizonasports.com