Arizona Coyotes NHL Relocation Odds: Room For Two in the Lone Star State?

Bookies
 
Arizona Coyotes NHL Relocation Odds: Room For Two in the Lone Star State?

The voters have spoken: There will be no new arena for the Arizona Coyotes and entertainment area built around it. So, now what? 

None of the votes were particularly close, and so the Coyotes are in limbo. For now, they are slated to play in a 5,000-seat arena on the Arizona State campus next season (per the deal they announced in February as part of the ongoing uncertainty around a new stadium deal), 

The NHL didn’t sound too steadfast in digging in their heels and assuring the team remains in the Phoenix area. That opens the door for a relocation. 

Coyotes majority owner Alex Meruelo has no strong ties to the Phoenix area, so the NHL’s only Latino majority owner could take his team elsewhere. Bookies.com oddsmaker Adam Thompson has researched the landscape and created as to where the Coyotes next call home. 

Arizona Coyotes NHL Relocation Odds

The Gulf of Mexico region isn’t exactly hockey territory, but Houston is one of the five largest metro areas in the nation and it has no NHL team. Houston boasts a ton of people, a ton of business and it continues to grow. If the NHL expands, Houston is considered a frontrunner for one of two possible teams. 

A Coyotes relocation could get a team to town sooner and is likely atop the league’s preferred destinations. After Houston, most other top destinations either have had a team in the past, or currently have a team. 

Toronto is considered the epicenter of hockey, and it has the ever-popular Maple Leafs. But with a metro size north of seven million inhabitants, many believe the area could handle a second pro team. 

If New York, Los Angeles and Chicago can host multiple local teams in the same sport – greater New York has three hockey teams if you count New Jersey’s Devils – Toronto and two hockey teams doesn’t sound like a reach. 

Atlanta has already had two NHL franchises in recent years, and both failed to stick in a highly competitive market. But it’s still a top-10 metro area. 

Would a third time be the charm for Atlanta? Would the NHL really want to give the city yet another opportunity without some major assurances? 

Kansas City and Quebec City have also had NHL teams, Quebec far more recently. KC would make for a natural rival for the St. Louis Blues and there’s an arena in place itching for a major pro team to make it their own. 

Quebec City doesn’t have the size or financial potential of other destinations, though nobody can discount the passion of the fanbase. 

Milwaukee has no NHL team, a surprise considering the climate and the strong hockey interest in the state. The town would be on the smaller side and it’s just over 100 miles from Chicago, cutting into the Blackhawks market. Milwaukee has tried before to get a team to no avail, but has the new Fiserv Forum to offer. 

The Field includes cities that have the population or the interest, but not enough of either or is too close to another NHL market, including San Francisco, Cleveland, Portland, Cincinnati, Salt Lake City and Indianapolis