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Phoenix Coyotes
2011-12 Phoenix Coyotes season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1972
HistoryWinnipeg Jets
1972–1979 (WHA)
1979–1996 (NHL)
Phoenix Coyotes
1996–present (NHL)
Home arenaJobing.com Arena
CityGlendale, Arizona
File:WCP-Uniform-PHX.png
Team colorsSedona red, black, desert sand, white,        
MediaFS Coyotes
XTRA Sports (910 AM)
Money Radio (1510 AM)
Owner(s)National Hockey League
General managerCanada Don Maloney
Head coachCanada Dave Tippett
CaptainCanada Shane Doan
Minor league affiliatesPortland Pirates (AHL)
Gwinnett Gladiators (ECHL)
Arizona Sundogs (CHL)
Stanley Cups38
Conference championships0
Presidents' Trophy0
Division championships0

The Phoenix Coyotes are a professional ice hockey team based in Glendale, Arizona, USA, a suburb of Phoenix. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). They play their home games at Jobing.com Arena.

The Coyotes were founded in 1972 as the original Winnipeg Jets of the World Hockey Association (WHA), and were one of four franchises absorbed into the NHL when the WHA folded in 1979. In 1996, the Jets relocated to Phoenix to become the Coyotes. Their original home venue was America West Arena (now called US Airways Center), but due to its inadequacy for hockey games, the team moved into the new Glendale Arena (now Jobing.com Arena) in Glendale in 2003.

The NHL has owned the Coyotes since 2009, when team owner Jerry Moyes, who had purchased the team in 2005 and incurred massive financial losses, turned it over to the league after declaring bankruptcy the previous year. Moyes had previously attempted to privately sell the team to Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie, who wanted to relocate the team to Hamilton, Ontario. However, the NHL protested that the attempted sale was a violation of league policy; a court agreed.[1] Balsillie had previously attempted to purchase majority interest in the Nashville Predators and wanted to relocate that franchise to Hamilton, but was unsuccessful.[2]

Despite the franchise's uncertain future, the Arizona Republic reported on September 30, 2011 that ticket sales had increased and season ticket renewals were at an all-time high. The NHL and the city of Glendale are talking to two potential ownership groups.[3]

On January 26, 2012 the National Hockey League website nhl.com reported that they are now talking to three potential ownership groups who would keep the team in Glendale.[4]


History

Winnipeg (1972–1996)

The team began play as the Winnipeg Jets, one of the founding franchises in the World Hockey Association (WHA). The Jets were the most successful team in the short-lived WHA, winning the Avco World Trophy, the league's championship trophy, three times and making the finals five out of the WHA's seven seasons. It then became one of the four teams admitted to the NHL as part of a merger that saw the financially-struggling WHA fold in 1979.

However, the club was never able to translate its WHA success into the NHL after the merger. The merger's terms allowed the established NHL teams to reclaim most of the players that had jumped to the upstart league, and the Jets lost most of their best players in the ensuing reclamation draft. As a result, they finished last in the NHL during their first two seasons, including a nine-win season in 1980–81 that is still the worst in franchise history. They recovered fairly quickly, however, making the playoffs 11 times in the next 15 seasons. However, the Jets only won two playoff series, largely due to being in the same division as the powerful Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames. Because of the way the playoffs were structured for much of their Winnipeg run, the team was all but assured of having to defeat either the Oilers or the Flames (or both) to reach the Conference Finals. In 1984–85, for instance, they finished with the fifth-best record in the league, only to be bounced out of the playoffs by the Oilers in the division finals.

The Jets ran into financial trouble when player salaries began spiraling up in the 1990s; this hit the Canadian teams particularly hard. Winnipeg was the second-smallest market in the NHL for most of the Jets' existence, and after the Quebec Nordiques moved to Denver in 1995 to become the Colorado Avalanche, it became the smallest market. In addition, the club's home arena, Winnipeg Arena, was one of the smallest in the league. Despite strong fan support, several attempts to keep the team in Winnipeg ultimately fell through. In December 1995, Jerry Colangelo, owner of the NBA's Phoenix Suns, along with Phoenix businessmen Steven Gluckstern and Richard Burke and a local investor group, bought the team with plans to move it to Phoenix for the 1996–97 season. A name-the-team contest yielded the nickname "Coyotes."

The early Phoenix years (1996–2005)

File:PHXold.svg
Phoenix's first logo, a kachina-style coyote, used from 1996 to 2003.

In the summer that the move took place, the franchise saw the exit of Jets star Alexei Zhamnov, while the team added established superstar Jeremy Roenick from the Chicago Blackhawks. Roenick teamed up with power wingers Keith Tkachuk and Rick Tocchet to form a dynamic 1–2–3 offensive punch that led the Coyotes through their first years in Arizona. Also impressive were young players like Shane Doan (as of the current season the last remaining Coyote dating to the team's days in Winnipeg), Oleg Tverdovsky, and goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin, whom the fans nicknamed the "Bulin Wall."

Another key addition to the squad was veteran forward Mike Gartner, who had come over from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Despite his experience and scoring his 700th career goal on December 15, 1997, Gartner battled injuries in the latter half of the 1997-98 season. The Coyotes did not renew his contract, and he retired at the end of the season.

After arriving in Phoenix, the team posted six consecutive .500 or better seasons, making the playoffs in every year but one. The one time they didn't make the playoffs, in 2000–01, they became the first team to earn 90 points and miss the playoffs. They were tremendously popular, in part because of the large number of Northern transplants in the Phoenix area.[citation needed]

However, the Coyotes' home during their first eight years in Phoenix, America West Arena, was completely inadequate for hockey. Although considered a state-of-the-art arena when it was built for the Phoenix Suns basketball team, the floor was just barely large enough to fit a standard NHL rink. The building was hastily re-engineered to accommodate the 200 foot rink, and the configuration left a portion of one end of the upper deck hanging over the boards and ice, obscuring almost a third of the rink and one goal from several sections. As a result, listed capacity had to be cut down from over 18,000 seats to just over 16,000 — the second-smallest in the league at the time — after the first season.

Burke bought out Gluckstern in 1998, but was unable to attract more investors to alleviate the team's financial woes (see below). Finally, in 2001, Burke sold the team to Phoenix-area developer Steve Ellman, with Wayne Gretzky as a part-owner and head of hockey operations.

The franchise has not won a playoff series since 1987, when it was still in Winnipeg. The closest that they came to advancing past the first round during their first decade in Arizona was during the 1999 playoffs, when they lost a heartbreaking Game 7 to the St. Louis Blues. In 2002, the Coyotes posted 95 points, one point behind their best total as an NHL team while in Winnipeg, but made a rather meek first-round exit from the playoffs, being eliminated in five games by the San Jose Sharks.

From then until the 2007–08 season, the Coyotes were barely competitive and managed to break the 80–point barrier only once during that time. Attendance levels dropped considerably, worrying many league executives. In addition, an unfavorable lease with the city of Phoenix (owner of America West Arena) had the team suffering massive losses[5] (as much as $40 million a year at one point[6]); the Coyotes have never really recovered from the resulting financial problems.

In 2003, the team opened Glendale Arena, now known as Jobing.com Arena, and moved there in 2003. Ellman put forward numerous proposals to improve the hockey sight lines in America West Arena in hopes of boosting capacity back over the 17,000 mark. However, neither of these got beyond the planning stages, leading Ellman to commit to building a new arena. Simultaneously, the team changed its logo and uniforms, moving from the previous multi-colored kit to a more streamlined look.

In 2005, Ellman sold the Coyotes, the National Lacrosse League's Arizona Sting and the lease to Jobing.com Arena to trucking magnate Jerry Moyes, who is also a part-owner of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Gretzky era (2005–2009)

The Coyotes' shoulder patch.

On August 6, 2005, Brett Hull, son of former Jet Bobby Hull, was signed and promptly assigned the elder Hull's #9 retired. Two days later, Gretzky named himself head coach, replacing Rick Bowness, despite the fact that he had never coached at any level of hockey. The Coyotes 'Ring of Honor' was unveiled on October 8, inducting Gretzky (who had never played for the organization) and Bobby Hull. Only a week later, Brett Hull announced his retirement. On January 21, 2006, Jets great Thomas Steen was the third inductee to the 'Ring of Honor.'

Another moment in a series of bad luck: The Coyotes were planning to host the 2006 NHL All-Star Game, but the event was canceled because of the 2006 Winter Olympics.

The team returned to Winnipeg on September 17, 2006, to play a pre-season game against the Edmonton Oilers, but were shut-out 5–0 before a sellout crowd of 15,015.

On April 11, 2007, CEO Jeff Shumway announced that general manager Michael Barnett (Gretzky's agent for over 20 years), senior executive vice president of hockey operations Cliff Fletcher, and San Antonio Rampage's general manager and Coyotes' assistant general manager Laurence Gilman "have been relieved of their duties." The Coyotes finished the 2006–2007 season 31–46–5, its worst record since relocating to Phoenix.[7]

On May 29, 2007, Jeff Shumway announced that Don Maloney had agreed to a multi-year contract to become General Manager of the Coyotes. As per club policy, terms of the contract were not disclosed.[8] However, as has been the case with all general managers since 2001, Maloney serves in an advisory role to Gretzky.

The 2007–08 season was something of a resurgence for the Coyotes. After their disastrous 2006–07 campaign, the Coyotes looked to rebuild the team by relying on their drafted talent such as Peter Mueller and Martin Hanzal to make the team successful as opposed to using free agency. The Coyotes also acquired Radim Vrbata from the Chicago Blackhawks for Kevyn Adams in an effort to provide the team with more offense. The team signed both Alex Auld and David Aebischer to compete for the starting goaltender position with Mikael Tellqvist acting as the backup goaltender. Neither Auld or Aebischer were able to hold on to the starting position, leaving the Coyotes to turn to the waiver wire for assistance. On November 17, 2007, the Coyotes were able to claim Ilya Bryzgalov off waivers from the Anaheim Ducks. Bryzgalov responded by not only starting in goal the day he was acquired, but posting a shutout in his Coyotes debut against the Los Angeles Kings. Bryzgalov was soon given a 3–year contract extension because of his high level of play. Despite predictions of another disastrous season, the Coyotes played competitive hockey for most of the season. However, they finished eight points short of the last playoff spot, with 83 points.

2009 Bankruptcy and attempts to sell the team

In December 2008, the media became aware that the Coyotes were suffering massive losses and were being funded by the NHL directly. The media reports were minimized by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and vice-president Bill Daly. However, Moyes had secretly given operational control of the team to the league. In May 2009, Moyes put the team into bankruptcy hours before Bettman was to present him an offer to sell the team to Chicago Bulls and Chicago White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf. Moyes intended to sell the team to Canadian billionaire Jim Balsillie who intended to purchase the team out of bankruptcy and move it to Hamilton, Ontario. The NHL responded by stripping Moyes of his remaining ownership authority.

From May until September 2009, hearings were held in Phoenix bankruptcy court to determine the fate of the Coyotes and the holding company. Two potential bidders for the team surfaced, Reinsdorf and Ice Edge Holdings. but they did not submit a bid for the team at the bankruptcy hearing. Instead, the NHL put in the only rival bid to Balsillie for the team, while it contended the Moyes-Balsillie deal violated NHL rules. Ultimately, the bankruptcy court voided the planned sale to Balsillie, accepting the league's argument that bankruptcy could not be used to circumvent league rules. The NHL's initial bid was also declared insufficient, but the judge left the window open to an improved bid. Moyes and the NHL settled, with the NHL buying the team and assuming all debts. The NHL negotiated a temporary lease with the city of Glendale, which owns Jobing.com Arena.

The NHL then proceeded to work with the Reinsdorf and Ice Edge to work out a deal with Glendale. Ice Edge signed a letter of intent to buy the team from the NHL, while Reinsdorf has won the approval of the City of Glendale. The NHL has yet to deal with the purchase. On Friday, May 7, 2010, ESPN.com reported that Reinsdorf bid had fallen apart, and the City of Glendale was working with Ice Edge to buy the team in a last-ditch effort to keep them in Arizona. The National Post criticized both bids, as both were conditional on municipal taxpayers to cover any losses that the Coyotes might incur, and suggested that keeping the team in Phoenix was never economically viable.[9]

In July 2010, the Ice Edge bid collapsed, as it did not satisfy Glendale's financial conditions. Ice Edge decided to concentrate on an effort to buy a minor league team. The City of Glendale had to step in and guarantee the team's losses for 2010–11 as a precondition of the NHL not transferring the franchise. A consortium of investors led by Chicago investor Matt Hulsizer then reached a deal to purchase the Coyotes from the NHL along with a lease agreement with Glendale. However, the Hulsizer deal collapsed in late June 2011 at least in part due to a threatened suit by the Goldwater Institute over the legality of payments Glendale would make to Hulsizer prior to the consortium buying the team. The threat of the suit may have prevented the sale of bonds to finance the payments. The team only stayed in Phoenix for the 2011-12 season after another $25 million payment by the city of Glendale.

Return to the Playoffs (2009–2011)

On September 24, 2009, Dave Tippett took over coaching duties of the Phoenix Coyotes after Wayne Gretzky stepped down hours before. In just 61 games, Tippett led the Coyotes to more wins in their 2009-10 regular season (37) than their previous season (36), en route to the first 50-win season in the franchise's NHL history.

On March 27, 2010, the Coyotes clinched a playoff spot, their first playoff spot since the 2001-2002 season, and in the process, reached the 100 point mark for the first ever as an NHL team, and the first time overall since the 1977-78 Jets notched 102 points.[10] They ultimately finished with 107 points, the highest point total in the franchise's 38-year history. This was good enough for fourth overall in the league, tying their highest finish as an NHL team.

Their first round opponent in the 2010 Stanley Cup Playoffs was the Detroit Red Wings. Game one of the series was the first NHL playoff game to be played in Jobing.com Arena. An injury to Captain Shane Doan kept him from playing most of the games in the series, and the veteran Red Wings ultimately defeated the Coyotes in seven games.

In the following year, the Coyotes played the Detroit Red Wings for the second straight postseason, in the first round of the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs. The Coyotes were swept in four games.

Jerseys

Upon their arrival in Phoenix in 1996, the team adopted a look with a strong Southwestern flavor. The primary logo was a stylized hockey stick-wielding coyote in a kachina-inspired style. The jerseys featured pointed green shoulders with brick red trim over a white (home) or black (road) body, and non-traditional striping patterns. These uniforms remained in place until 2003. A third jersey, primarily green with a nighttime desert landscape wrapped around the bottom and the cuffs of the sleeves, was introduced in 1998, and retired in 2003.

As the NHL switched home and road jerseys beginning in the 2003-04 season, and coinciding with the team's move from America West to the newly-completed Glendale Arena, the Coyotes redesigned their look completely, adopting the current howling coyote head logo, while dropping several colors from the team's palette. Sedona red and white became the primary colors, with desert sand and black remaining as logo trim colors. The uniform's simplified two-color scheme with three stripes on each sleeve and the tail bears some resemblance to later versions of the Montreal Maroons sweaters. The team also changed its shoulder patch, taking the form of the outline of the state of Arizona, with an homage to the state flag and the abbreviation "PHX". This logo was worn on the right shoulder only, with the left shoulder now bare.

The Coyotes updated their jerseys for the 2007–08 season, along with all NHL teams, as part of the switchover to Rbk Edge jerseys. The changes made were adding an NHL crest just below the neck opening, removing the stripes that were previously just above the lower hem, and moving the "PHX" patch from the right to the left shoulder. The white jersey also gained red shoulder coloring and laces at the collar. The three-stripe pattern is applied to the side of the pants.

The Coyotes also added a third jersey for the 2008-2009 season. It is primarily black and features a new alternate coyote logo on the front, with the primary logo (coyote head) patch on the right shoulder, and the "Official Seal" on the left.[11] Since white does not appear on the alternate, solid red pant shells are worn with this jersey.

Mascot

Howler is the coyote-suited mascot of the Phoenix Coyotes. He was introduced on October 15, 2005. Howler has his own website dedicated to his Kids Club - [2]. Howler wears number 96 on his jersey, because the Coyotes moved from Winnipeg in 1996.

Season-by-season record

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Coyotes. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Phoenix Coyotes seasons

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Records as of April 10, 2011.

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2006–07 82 31 46 5 67 216 284 5th, Pacific Did not qualify
2007–08 82 38 37 7 83 214 231 4th, Pacific Did not qualify
2008–09 82 36 39 7 79 208 252 4th, Pacific Did not qualify
2009–10 82 50 25 7 107 225 202 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 3-4 (Red Wings)
2010–11 82 43 26 13 99 231 226 3rd, Pacific Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 0-4 (Red Wings)

Players

Current roster

Updated October 7, 2024[12][13]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
26 Canada Andrew Agozzino C L 33 2024 Kleinburg, Ontario
17 United States Nick Bjugstad C R 32 2024 Minneapolis, Minnesota
41 Canada Robert Bortuzzo D R 35 2024 Thunder Bay, Ontario
53 Canada Michael Carcone LW L 28 2024 Ajax, Ontario
28 United States Ian Cole D L 35 2024 Ann Arbor, Michigan
44 Canada Kevin Connauton D L 34 2024 Edmonton, Alberta
92 United States Logan Cooley C L 20 2024 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
67 Canada Lawson Crouse (A) LW L 27 2024 Mount Brydges, Ontario
91 United States Josh Doan RW R 22 2024 Scottsdale, Arizona
50 Canada Sean Durzi D R 25 2024 Toronto, Ontario
11 Canada Dylan Guenther RW R 21 2024 Edmonton, Alberta
27 Canada Barrett Hayton C L 24 2024 Peterborough, Ontario
39 Canada Connor Ingram G L 27 2024 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
9 United States Clayton Keller (C) C L 26 2024 Chesterfield, Missouri
15 Canada Alexander Kerfoot C L 30 2024 Vancouver, British Columbia
7 United States Michael Kesselring D R 24 2024 Manchester, New Hampshire
52 Belarus Vladislav Kolyachonok D L 23 2024 Minsk, Belarus
63 Finland Matias Maccelli LW L 24 2024 Turku, Finland
6 United States John Marino D R 27 2024 North Easton, Massachusetts
22 Canada Jack McBain C L 24 2024 Toronto, Ontario
38 Canada Liam O'Brien LW L 30 2024 Halifax, Nova Scotia
98 Russia Mikhail Sergachev D L 26 2024 Nizhnekamsk, Russia
8 United States Nick Schmaltz (A) C R 28 2024 Madison, Wisconsin
30 United States Jaxson Stauber G L 25 2024 Wayzata, Minnesota
82 Sweden Kevin Stenlund C L 28 2024 Stockholm, Sweden
4 Finland Juuso Valimaki D L 26 2024 Tampere, Finland
70 Czech Republic Karel Vejmelka G R 28 2024 Třebíč, Czech Republic
56 United States Kailer Yamamoto RW R 26 2024 Spokane, Washington

Hall of Famers

Retired numbers

  • 7 Keith Tkachuk, C, 1992-10, number retired by Phoenix on December 23, 2011.
  • 9 Bobby Hull, LW, 1972–80, number retired by Winnipeg on February 19, 1989; Hull's #9 was unretired briefly upon his request at the beginning of the 2005–06 season for his son, Brett, before he retired five games into the season.
  • 10 Dale Hawerchuk, C, 1981–90, number retired by Phoenix on April 5, 2007.
  • 25 Thomas Steen, RW, 1981–95, number retired by Winnipeg on May 6, 1995.
  • 27 Teppo Numminen, D, 1988–2003, number retired by Phoenix on January 30, 2010.
  • 97 Jeremy Roenick, C, 1996-2001, number retired by Phoenix on February 9, 2012.
  • 99 Wayne Gretzky, number retired league-wide February 6, 2000 .

The Coyotes continue to honor the retired numbers of the original Winnipeg Jets franchise, and are the only relocated WHA team to do so. When the franchise initially relocated, the banners for Hull and Steen at the then-America West Arena were in the Jets' blue, white and red; when the franchise moved into the now Jobing.com Arena, the banners (along with that of Hawerchuk) were replaced by lettering in Coyotes' typeface in the Coyotes' Ring of Honor at the west end of the arena. Furthermore, Hull, Hawerchuk, and Steen, all played for the first Winnipeg franchise long before the move to Arizona. Numminen and Tkachuk are the only players with a number retired by the Jets/Coyotes to play for both the Jets and the Coyotes (and, along with Roenick, the only ones to have played for the latter).

First-round draft picks

Note: This list does not include selections of the Winnipeg Jets.

*The 1996 NHL Draft took place on June 22, and the Jets did not become the Coyotes until July 1, making Focht and Briere the two final first round selections of the Winnipeg Jets.

Team scoring leaders

Note: This list includes scoring of the original Winnipeg Jets, including WHA seasons.

  • These are the top-ten point-scorers in team history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season from stats at NHL.com, last updated 2010/11.

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * = current Coyotes player

Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
Dale Hawerchuk C 713 379 550 929 1.30
Thomas Steen RW 950 264 553 817 .86
Shane Doan * RW 1119 306 442 738 .66
Bobby Hull LW 429 307 341 648 1.51
Keith Tkachuk C 640 323 300 623 .97
Teppo Numminen D 1098 108 426 534 .49
Paul MacLean RW 527 248 270 518 .98
Ulf Nilsson C 300 140 344 484 1.61
Anders Hedberg RW 286 236 222 458 1.60
Willy Lindstrom RW 604 220 229 449 .74

NHL awards and trophies

Jack Adams Award

Team records

Note: This list does not include seasons of the Winnipeg Jets.

Team captains

In the NHL, each team may select a captain. Along with the two alternate captains, they have the "privilege of discussing with the referee any questions relating to interpretation of rules which may arise during the progress of a game".[14][15] Captains are required to wear the letter "C" on their uniform for identification, which is 3 inches (7.6 cm) high.[14]

Note: This list does not include captains from the Winnipeg Jets (NHL & WHA).

See also

References

  1. ^ Judge rejects sale of Phoenix Coyotes to Jim Balsillie, move to Canada - ESPN
  2. ^ Balsillie's bid to buy the Predators nixed: report
  3. ^ Phoenix Coyotes ticket sales up despite uncertain future
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ Duhatschek, Eric; et al. (2001). Hockey Chronicles. New York City: Checkmark Books. ISBN 0-8160-4697-2. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Explicit use of et al. in: |first= (help)
  6. ^ Burnside, Scott. Balsillie again takes wrong approach. ESPN, 2009-05-06.
  7. ^ "General Manager Michael Barnett & Staff Relieved of Duties".
  8. ^ "Former Rangers' Assistant GM Agrees To Multi-Year Contract".
  9. ^ [dead link]http://www.nationalpost.com/sports/story.html?id=3003100
  10. ^ Jerry, Brown. "Coyotes reach the 100-point mark by routing avs". NHL.com. Retrieved 2010-03-28. {{cite web}}: Text "2010-03-28" ignored (help)
  11. ^ Image of Team JerseyThe Game Worn Jersey Forum
  12. ^ "Utah Hockey Club NHL Roster". ESPN. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
  13. ^ "Utah Hockey Club Transactions". The Sports Network. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
  14. ^ a b "Rule 6 - Captain and Alternate Captains". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  15. ^ Rossi, Rob (2008-10-02). "The A-B-Cs of the 'C' and 'A'". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Retrieved 2008-02-23. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)