Reinsdorf bid for NHL Coyotes approved

0

CHICAGO (AP) — The NHL Board of Governors approved a bid Wednesday by Jerry Reinsdorf to assume ownership
of the financially troubled Phoenix Coyotes, and unanimously rejected an application by Canadian
billionaire Jim Balsillie to buy the team.
The group heading by Reinsdorf, the owner of the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Bulls, was the only one of
three applicants to gain the board’s approval on Wednesday. That vote was unanimous, too, NHL
commissioner Gary Bettman said.
The board convened a special meeting in Chicago to evaluate each group’s applications before an eventual
sale of the Coyotes, who were taken into Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 5 by current owner Jerry Moyes.

Bettman said the process was necessary to comply with the NHL’s constitution and bylaws, and an order by
U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Redfield T. Baum.
"We will so advise the bankruptcy court and we will move this process forward," Bettman said.

An application by a third group, led by Anthony LeBlanc of Thunder Bay, Ontario, was deemed
"incomplete," Bettman said. That consortium, however, was encouraged by the board to continue
with the application process.
Representatives of each group met Wednesday morning with the NHL board’s executive committee, which took
its recommendations to the entire board for a vote.
The Reinsdorf group has told the NHL it wants to buy the Coyotes for $148 million and keep the team in
Arizona. Balsillie has offered $212.5 million for the Coyotes, but his proposal is contingent on moving
the franchise to Hamilton, Ontario.
"This had nothing whatsoever to do with the relocation issue," Bettman said "All that was
considered was the suitability of the applicants of the owners."
More than money is involved, Bettman stressed.
"The criteria set forth in the (NHL) constitution and bylaws relates to financial wherewithal,
character, integrity and the view whether or not the other owners would deem you a good partner,"
Bettman said.
Balsillie hoped to buy the team and move it to hockey-crazed southern Ontario. However, the NHL wants the
Coyotes to remain in Arizona and continue to play at the Jobing.com Arena in Glendale, a Phoenix suburb.

The team has lost money in Arizona each season since moving there from Winnipeg, Manitoba, in 1996.
When asked why Reinsdorf’s group’s application was approved, Bettman said, "That’s a question better
directed to the governors because they’re the ones who vote.
"But I think based on Mr. Reinsdorf’s experience and reputation as an owner of two very successful
franchises in other sports leagues, it’s no surprise that his application would be endorsed."

No posts to display