CHRDANHUTCH
Registered User
Albany has no interest in pro hockey, the Rangers own the franchise outrightAlbany would be perfect for rangers
Albany has no interest in pro hockey, the Rangers own the franchise outrightAlbany would be perfect for rangers
Nope. Like it or not, the Wolf Pack are Hartford hockey and have been for 21 years and counting.Albany would be perfect for rangers
Spectacor controls the business operations of the xl center and the Wolfpack if things don't work out in Hartford and the rangers Wanted to be in the New York capitol region they would they would most likely look at Glens Falls over Albany Comcast Spectacor - WikipediaAlbany would be perfect for rangers
nope, try harder, js.... where is the Rangers newest affiliate based, in a Spectra owned facility, it is no longer CS, IT IS SpectraSpectacor controls the business operations of the xl center and the Wolfpack if things don't work out in Hartford and the rangers Wanted to be in the New York capitol region they would they would most likely look at Glens Falls over Albany Comcast Spectacor - Wikipedia
Comcast Spectacor is the parent company of Spectra, so technically I think you are both correct.nope, try harder, js.... where is the Rangers newest affiliate based, in a Spectra owned facility, it is no longer CS, IT IS Spectra
You are saying the Devils AHL team was moved to Binghamton because the ECHL Thunder "own the rights" to hockey in the area? That's not true. The Thunder could probably block an ECHL team from going into Albany if someone wanted to do that, and they felt it would hurt their business, but I don't believe an ECHL team and prevent an AHL team from locating there, and they most certainly can't force a pre-existing AHL team to leave.FYI, Js, Adirondack owns the territorial rights to the Capital District as long as the Thunder are an active member, that is why the transfer was made to let Albany migrate to Binghamton, when Ottawa bought the Senators affiliation outright AND FLIPPED it to Belleville....
There are no territory rules in hockey like in baseballYou are saying the Devils AHL team was moved to Binghamton because the ECHL Thunder "own the rights" to hockey in the area? That's not true. The Thunder could probably block an ECHL team from going into Albany if someone wanted to do that, and they felt it would hurt their business, but I don't believe an ECHL team and prevent an AHL team from locating there, and they most certainly can't force a pre-existing AHL team to leave.
There are no territory rules in hockey like in baseball
Google MapsThe AHL has historically had territorial rights for their teams. It is a 50 mile radius from the arena where the team plays. I do believe the ECHL has something similar,or it is one of those unwritten rules that you don't put teams too close together, especially in the same league.
But on a Friday night, Worcester & Providence are a thousand miles apart.
Like Rowdy said baseball is different. Albany NY was caught up in that to. When the Class A Valleycats were coming to fruition, a group was going to purchase the Binghamton Mets AA club and move them to Albany. Albany was in early stages of building a stadium in its warehouse district. That plan however was thwarted when William Gladstone and Senator Joe Bruno beat Albany's plan to the punch. Baseball's governing body awarded the rights to the Valleycats.
i think the NHL can block a ahl team from entering a market like the NHL blocked the AHL Riverman to SeattleI don't want to sidetrack the conversation, but just for point of fact: minor league baseball's territorial rules are strict and apply to all levels, BUT a higher level team may usurp the rights to a lower-level market. Offhand, this happened in Portland (Oregon) and Salt Lake City, and in both cases a Triple-A team displaced a short-season Class-A franchise. (I'm sure it's happened elsewhere, but those are the occasions I can think of at the moment.) Any MiLB relocation requires approval from 1) the league, 2) Minor League Baseball, and 3) Major League Baseball, through the Office of the Commissioner. As a result, if a team believes it is being unduly forced from it's market, the franchise can lobby MiLB and/or the commissioner's office to reject the move. The team/league taking over the market will owe the departing team/league a fee, which can be determined by negotiation or, if that doesn't work, arbitration. The displaced team doesn't disappear, it just needs to find a new market.
Sorry for the tangent, but I just figured I'd share.
what? I think you're widely misinformed there Js, especially if the AHL now requires an affiliation prior to the granting of any franchise, where are you getting Seattle, there has been no professional hockey in the Northwest, the closest pro team is Idaho...The NHL can block a ahl team from entering a market like they NHL blocked the Riverman to Seattle
the NHL blocked the AHL Riveman from going to key arena because the coyotes where looking at the key arena if things went bad in glendalewhat? I think you're widely misinformed there Js, especially if the AHL now requires an affiliation prior to the granting of any franchise, where are you getting Seattle, there has been no professional hockey in the Northwest, the closest pro team is Idaho...
Peoria, if that's the franchise you're thinking of was sold to Vancouver by St. Louis, the current Rivermen are an entirely different franchise in an entirely different league, same as Quad City's flip from the ECHL to the SPHL....
THE NHL cannot block another team's affiliate from setting up in the same market as an existing NHL/AHL/ECHL/SPHL team, even if it owns the affiliate, it's happened twice..... Edmonton tried that with the now Bakersfield franchise in Toronto and Cincinnati did that under Anaheim's affiliation after being in Washington's territory in Baltimore going head to head with the existing Cyclones and frankly, it damaged both brands to such a degree that the Cyclones are just now recovered from that scenario
Arizona has absolutely nothing to do with that discussion nor that transfer, sir, because you're forgetting one former player now operates the franchise in Utica, New York, and Peoria's franchise went there, were you here when the Journal Star was downright incendiary over acquiring the franchise from Worcester?the NHL blocked the AHL Riveman from going to key arena because the coyotes almost moved there
Boe was a great owner in Worcester from what i heard about the early ice cats. the blues alienated a lot of businesses in the city when they took overArizona has absolutely nothing to do with that discussion nor that transfer, sir, because you're forgetting one former player now operates the franchise in Utica, New York, and Peoria's franchise went there, were you here when the Journal Star was downright incendiary over acquiring the franchise from Worcester?
Peoria has only been an IHL/AHL/ECHL Market prior to the current iteration, and the same owner who "stole" THE FRANCHISE FROM Worcester has not been alive since 2014, if you research Peoria's ECHL history, there is absolutely no mention of Seattle except on a Canucks message board/fan site
remember, Worcester was a charter member, Js, just as Hershey and Rochester have been, prior to 1994, as the Springfield Indians, the owner had to divest the franchise because he was also operating Bridgeport, which was a violation of AHL Statutes which stated you can only represent one team, not multiple teams, that is how the Blues got into the owner/operation business until they sold the franchise to the Canucks and why the Blues are now solely an affiliate....
St. Louis had to be talked into that affiliation, because it was the tailend of the era of an independent franchises, which is why the League now requires an affiliationBoe was a great owner in Worcester from what i heard about the early ice cats. the blues alienated a lot of businesses in the city when they took over
i think the NHL can block a ahl team from entering a market like they NHL blocked the AHL Riverman to Seattle
St. Louis had to be talked into that affiliation, because it was the tailend of the era of an independent franchises, which is why the League now requires an affiliation
I think The nhl has the votes in the ahl to veto a move by an independent owner if a ahl team for example wanted to move to Houston and the market was being eyed by a nhl team the nhl owned ahl teams could vote it downOfficially (and legally) they can't...but there are ways around that.
And failing that, if an AHL team moved to a city that the NHL didn't want them to, the affiliated NHL team could simply cancel the affiliation. The AHL team would be forced to fold, and then the NHL team could buy an expansion franchise and locate them somewhere else. I don't think it would ever come to that, since the independent AHL teams know the NHL holds all the power in the relationship.I think The nhl has the votes in the ahl to veto a move by an independent owner if a ahl team for example wanted to move to Houston and the market was being eyed by a nhl team the nhl owned ahl teams could vote it down
I think The nhl has the votes in the ahl to veto a move by an independent owner if a ahl team for example wanted to move to Houston and the market was being eyed by a nhl team the nhl owned ahl teams could vote it down