Sports
Coyotes face more instability with voters’ rejection of proposed arena

Fans watch as players warm up prior to the Arizona Coyotes’ home-opening NHL hockey game against the Winnipeg Jets at the 5,000-seat Mullett Arena in Tempe, Ariz., Oct. 28, 2022. The Coyotes are about to learn the fate of a proposed entertainment district that will include a new arena. A referendum going before voters in the city of Tempe will determine whether plans for the $2.3 billion Tempe Entertainment District will move forward. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)
By John Marshall in Tempe
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — The Arizona Coyotes were confident more than two decades of instability were coming to a close.
A “yes” vote on a referendum for an entertainment district would allow the franchise to finally build its own arena.
When Tempe voters said no in Tuesday’s election, the team was left in shock and with no clear path to the future.
“What is next for the franchise will be evaluated by our owners and the National Hockey League over the coming weeks,” Coyotes President and CEO Xavier A. Gutierrez said.
The Coyotes’ internal polling showed the three propositions related to the arena would pass easily.
Voters had other ideas, overwhelmingly saying “no” to the proposed $2.3 billion Tempe Entertainment District, leaving the franchise still in a state of flux.
“The National Hockey League is terribly disappointed by the results of the public referendum regarding the Coyotes’ arena project in Tempe,” NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said. “We are going to review with the Coyotes what the options might be going forward.”
The Coyotes have faced instability almost since moving to Arizona from Winnipeg in 1996.
The franchise shared then-America West Arena with the NBA’s Phoenix Suns before moving to Glendale’s Gila River Arena in 2003. When former owner Jerry Moyes took the Coyotes into bankruptcy, the NHL stepped in and ran the organization for four seasons.
A new ownership group brought hope in 2013, but turmoil resurfaced two years later, when the city of Glendale backed out of a long-term, multimillion-dollar lease agreement. The Coyotes leased the arena on an annual basis until Glendale announced it was terminating the contract after the 2021-22 season.
The Coyotes’ temporary solution was to share Mullett Arena with Arizona State University, a 5,000-seat building that’s by far the smallest in the NHL.
Now the organization has to shift gears yet again after voters rejected a proposed new arena.
The Coyotes will likely play in Mullett Arena next season, but it is not a long-term option. Playing at such a small arena hurts the overall league revenue and the Mullett, while nice, is not up to NHL standards.
One option could be to move back downtown and share what’s now called the Footprint Center with the Suns. The Coyotes had an icy relationship with former Suns owner Robert Sarver, but new owner Mat Ishbia might be more amenable to a partnership.
The Coyotes have said there was a backup plan if the Tempe deal fell through, perhaps a move to another Phoenix suburb, but have kept it under wraps.
A return to Glendale is likely out because of the team’s strained relationship with the city, though another city might be willing to work something out. Phoenix is surrounded by tribal lands, but any deal there would be complicated, particularly if owner Alex Meruelo wants a casino to be part of the development.
Relocation rumors have followed the Coyotes for years and the rejection by Tempe may lead to a road out of the desert. Bettman has been adamant the franchise will remain in Arizona.
Maybe the Coyotes and league can look at relocating somewhere like Portland, Oregon, Kansas City, Houston, Milwaukee or Salt Lake City. Canadian fans in non-NHL cities have clamored to have a team of their own, so perhaps the Coyotes head back to Canada, maybe to Quebec City or Hamilton, Ontario.
From an on-ice perspective, the Coyotes will attempt to continue to operate as if nothing has changed.
But the rejection vote could hamper the team in free agency, with some players unwilling to head to the desert when there’s so much uncertainty. It may also impact their ability to sign first-rounder Logan Cooley and the Coyotes’ other draft picks, who might not want to join a team when they don’t know if it’s still going to be in Arizona.
The Coyotes are in a tough spot all around. The optimism surrounding a possible escape from instability turned into more chaos with the “no” vote.
Sports
Thunderbirds cruise past Blazers 6-1 to punch ticket to Memorial Cup semifinal

Seattle Thunderbirds goalie Thomas Milic, left, blocks a shot from Kamloops Blazers forward Daylan Kuefler during first period Memorial Cup hockey action in Kamloops, Wednesday, May 31, 2023.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
By Abdulhamid Ibrahim in Kamloops
The Seattle Thunderbirds’ best performance at the Memorial Cup pleased head coach Matt O’Dette, although it didn’t show in his stoic look.
Kyle Crnkovic and Jared Davidson each had a goal and two assists for the Thunderbirds in Wednesday’s 6-1 win over the Kamloops Blazers to reach the tournament semifinal.
Seattle will next play Friday against the winner between Kamloops and the Ontario Hockey League champion Peterborough Petes in Thursday’s tiebreaker.
“It’s up there,” O’Dette said when asked where the complete performance ranks in recent memory. “That’s more to the identity and the team that we can be.
“That’s clearly our best game of the tournament, so we’re happy with that. Moving forward, we need to duplicate that type of effort.”
Lucas Ciona, Jordan Gustafson, Luke Prokop and Colton Dach also scored for the Western Hockey League champion T-Birds. Seattle starter Thomas Milic made 30 saves for the win.
“They’re a great team . . . I think we played our style of game and it’s very hard for teams to compete with us when we do that,” Prokop said. “We played a very well-rounded game. It’s just difficult for teams to keep up with that.”
The preparation for Friday’s semifinal has already begun, according to O’Dette. He wasn’t concerned about his team getting overconfident.
“It’s a matter of staying even-keeled,” he said. “We’ve been that team over the course of the playoffs. When we got a big win we’ve put it aside and got ready for the next game.
“We have a veteran team, been in some pretty big situations, so we’ve got the experience not to get too high. In this tournament all the teams are excellent and the next challenge is coming our way on Friday.”
Ryan Hofer scored the lone goal for the host Blazers with Dylan Ernst stopping 36 shots.
“It wasn’t our best game. I thought that we looked nervous, struggled completing passes,” said Kamloops head coach Shaun Clouston. “Hof scored a big goal so we’re 1-1, which is a real positive.
“A couple breakdowns, just the turnover in the back of our end, some real glaring ones. I think, again, some guys gotta find a little more confidence against that team.”
Peterborough — after opening the tournament with two straight losses — staved off elimination with Tuesday’s 4-2 win over the Quebec Remparts.
The Remparts (2-1) have a bye to Sunday’s final after beating both Seattle and Kamloops.
Ciona opened the scoring for the Thunderbirds 4:02 into the first period.
The captain sent a lead pass to a streaking Davidson, who fired a backhand shot that was stopped, but not controlled, by Ernst. After a scramble in front, Ciona sniped the puck home for his second of the tournament.
A costly Seattle mistake led to Kamloops drawing even at 10:50.
Kevin Korchinski turned the puck over to Daylan Kuefler as he looked to leave his own zone. Kuefler quickly dished it to Hofer, who wired the puck past Milic from the right faceoff circle.
But Davidson put the Thunderbirds ahead with a power-play marker at 6:39 of the second period.
The Blazers defence had a lapse when Dylan Guenther found Davidson open with an up-ice stretch pass. Davidson drove in and fired the puck past Ernst from the left faceoff circle.
Just eight seconds later, the Thunderbirds capitalized on another Blazers’ gaffe.
Kamloops defenceman Aapo Sarell turned the puck over behind the net to Crnkovic, who fed Gustafson in front of the net to beat Ernst for a 3-1 lead.
Seattle outshot the Blazers 29-19 through two heated periods with numerous skirmishes between the WHL foes.
Crnkovic padded the Thunderbirds’ lead at 5:33 of the third period. He scored his team-leading fourth goal of the tournament with a point shot that beat Ernst glove side.
Prokop made it 5-1 just over a minute later. He scored from the slot on a pass Brad Lambert intended for Guenther.
Dach scored with 5:32 remaining in the game when he took a pass from Reid Schaefer from the right faceoff circle, brought the puck around Ernst and tucked it in.
HAVE WE MET?
The Thunderbirds and Blazers split their four-game regular-season series and finished first and second in the Western Conference standings. The two met in the Western Conference championship series, with Seattle prevailing 4-2 in the best-of-seven matchup.
The Thunderbirds also ousted Kamloops in the 2022 conference final in seven games.
“It’s been a great little rivalry developed over the last couple of years,” O’Dette said after practice Wednesday. “They’re a great team, you know, I think they don’t get enough respect.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 31, 2023.
Sports
Thunderbirds look to lean on big-game experience in run for first Memorial Cup title

Dylan Guenther of the Seattle Thunderbirds is shown in a handout photo. Guenther is among five players on the Thunderbirds squad who led Canada to a world junior championship gold medal back in January
By Abdulhamid Ibrahim in Kamloops
The Seattle Thunderbirds are looking to continue using the big-game experience they possess to their advantage at the Memorial Cup.
Dylan Guenther is among six players on the Thunderbirds squad who led Canada to a world junior championship gold medal back in January — where Guenther had a two-goal outing, including the overtime winner in the final. Defencemen Nolan Allan and Kevin Korchinski, goaltender Thomas Milic and forwards Reid Schaefer and Colton Dach were the others.
Allan, Guenther and Dach were in-season trade pickups for Western Hockey League champion Seattle, which is taking aim at its first Memorial Cup title in its third tournament appearance.
“It’s really important, I think it’s the reason why we’re here,” said head coach Matt O’Dette. “It helps to have the big-game experience.
“We have guys who played world juniors, we’ve got guys who played gold-medal games in that tournament, which is obviously bright lights. We’re going to use those experiences … for the remainder of the tournament, so we’ve got those guys to lean on.”
Guenther started the year with the NHL’s Arizona Coyotes, who drafted him ninth overall in 2021. The six-foot-two, 175-pound right-winger had six goals and nine assists in 33 games for Arizona and was loaned to Canada for the world juniors in December.
He had seven goals and three assists in seven contests, including his headlining performance against Czechia in the gold-medal final. After a short return to the Coyotes, he was re-assigned to Seattle in February, which had acquired his rights from the Edmonton Oil Kings the month prior.
Guenther had 29 points (13 goals, 16 assists) in 20 regular-season games before adding 28 more, including a WHL- and then-CHL-high 16 goals in 19 post-season games leading into the Memorial Cup. He has yet to find the scoresheet in two games since.
“It’s been pretty good,” Guenther said of his season to date. “I think, obviously, this is the time where you want to peak.”
“I think just trusting yourself and your abilities,” he added about the space he has to be in for big moments. “Played hockey for a long time, worked really hard to get here, so just trusting myself and trusting my teammates.”
The Thunderbirds earned a berth in Friday’s semifinal with a 6-1 win over the Kamloops Blazers on Wednesday.
Seattle’s next opponent is the winner of Thursday’s tiebreaker between the host Blazers and Ontario Hockey League’s Peterborough Petes.
Allan, a 2021 first-round draft pick of the Chicago Blackhawks, was part of a package deal between Seattle and the Prince Albert Raiders in November.
He had 10 points (two goals, eight assists) in the WHL playoffs and has two goals through two games at the Memorial Cup. He has played a key role on the Thunderbirds’ blue line trying to stifle opponents’ top lines.
The world junior experience is one Allan says has helped both individually and collectively.
“Any time you win a championship or something special like that, you create a bond with one another. (It) made us a little bit tighter of a group.
“Especially me, I had only known a couple of the guys here for like two weeks before I went there, so I think that was a big part of … getting to know them a bit better.”
“Having a lot of us with that experience, it’s big going into our playoff run,” he added. “Coming here to this tournament, knowing how to handle the pressure and what the games are going to be like (and) to be able to share that with our other teammates, who may not have had that much experience.”
Guenther views the shared experience of being in-season additions and time at the world juniors as a positive for the team.
“I think it’s good,” he said. “Obviously world juniors is really hard to mimic, so when you have guys who have played there and who want to continue to get better every day, I think it develops the rest of the team.
“The players within the team get better, which contributes to team success. I think just the drivers that we have, it starts in practice, that has allowed us to have success over the course of the season.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 31, 2023.
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