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It appears as though the Phoenix Coyotes are going to play in Glendale for the 2009-10 NHL season. They might be a pathetic shell of a franchise, with one eye on the guillotine blade over its head, the other on the U-Haul trucks rolling towards the arena and about 12 season-ticket holders. But they also won't be in Hamilton. At least not yet.

That's the impression from yesterday's four-hour U.S. bankruptcy court hearing in Phoenix, that saw Judge Redfield Baum send the NHL and Coyotes "owner" Jerry Moyes to mediation in an attempt to figure out who actually owns the team.

With that question unsettled, the timetable for relocating the Coyotes appears to work against billionaire Jim Balsillie's plan to purchase them and ship them to southern Ontario. From the Arizona Republic:

The control issue, however, might be irrelevant if the judge agrees with the NHL that the team can't be moved without consent of other owners. Baum ordered both sides to present written arguments by June 12 regarding whether the team can be relocated to Canada or stay in Glendale. A hearing is set for 10 a.m. June 22.

Until that is determined, an auction for the team cannot occur. That is a setback for Balsillie, who wanted the sale to close by June 26, the first day of the NHL draft. Balsillie could pull out if the judge rules the team has to remain in Glendale indefinitely.

With no date set for an auction and the judge being unavailable from June 25 to July 3, a final resolution might not occur until later this summer. Bankruptcy cases can last months or even years.

So it's a drawn-out process, or at least it could be; which is actually a welcome change from the hasty, mistake-riddled decisions made by both sides that are coming to light in this case.

First off, the NHL could go 1-for-2 in this hearing and still manage to keep Balsillie from destroying its system for franchise relocation and ownership.

The judge clearly states that the proxy arrangement between the League and Moyes was insufficient in determining who actually "owned" the team; hence the mediation, a process that CBC Sports breaks down nicely in a Q&A today.

So there is a chance that Moyes still "owns" the Coyotes. But the NHL can lose that battle and win the war if the court finds that only the NHL can grant permission to relocate teams, which is at the heart of Balsillie's rebellious bid to move the franchise. From the Globe & Mail's excellent coverage:

Bill Daly, the deputy commissioner of the NHL, said he was confident "decades of court rulings" will mean Judge Baum - who started yesterday's hearing saying he did not want to rule on the relocation issue - will uphold the NHL's contention that only it can decide where teams are located and that all Mr. Moyes has the right to sell is a team that plays hockey in Arizona.

"The biggest issue is, is this a mobile asset and we have to decide that before we have an auction," Mr. Daly said. "I'm confident in the court's ability to decide the issue. Many courts have decided the issue over many years and sports leagues have always maintained the ability to control the locations of their franchises. I don't expect anything different here."

As we previously mentioned, the NHL has the backing of the other major sports leagues in keeping those rules in place. But as Darren Dreger points out for TSN, the court's "sole responsibility is to the creditors." Which could even mean an auction for the franchise rather than a direct sale to Balsillie.

Balsillie's group didn't help itself in the way it tried to circumvent the process, because it's hard to prove you're being stonewalled when you've never actually tested the wall. Again, from the Globe & Mail:

[The judge] chided the Phoenix lawyer who represented Mr. Balsillie in court, Susan Freeman, for not making a formal application to the NHL to move the team.

The judge argued it was hard for Mr. Balsillie and Mr. Moyes to make the case that the NHL was unreasonably blocking their attempts to take over the team and move it if there had been no application to the league to do so.

When Ms. Freeman suggested NHL commissioner Gary Bettman was steadfastly opposed to approving a Balsillie bid, Judge Baum reminded her that decision is made by the board of governors.

Oops.

The bottom line is that the NHL hastily took over the Coyotes without explicitly spelling out what would happen if Moyes attempted to do what he's done. And Balsillie's group hastily tried to uproot the franchise by claiming the NHL wouldn't let them do it without, you know, asking the NHL if it could. And now a judge is rightfully telling them both that their sloppy approach to this matter has muddied the issues.

Some other news and views from the Coyotes mess:

• We might have a non-Reinsdorf, perhaps Gretzky-involved group headed by Coyotes minority owner John Breslow trying to buy and keep the team in Phoenix? David Shoalts believes so.

Blogger Greg Esposito of the Save The Coyotes Coalition speaks with the Arizona Republic about "feuding" with Canadian fans and media -- including a decision not to destroy a slew of BlackBerry phones to protest Balsillie.

• So, did you figure Winnipeg would be overjoyed with the news that the Coyotes could be offered to the city? Not when the chorus is "don't get your hopes up," "games are too expensive" and "Winnipeg can't support a team anyway."

Columnist Stephen Knight: "I don't recall Bettman being quite so determined or chivalrous when Winnipeg was dumped in favour of Phoenix or when Quebec City was dumped in favour of Colorado. This is not to make any hysterical claims that Bettman is anti-Canadian." OK then.

Finally, tough talk from Gary Bettman critic Ken Campbell of The Hockey News: "We know now, because of this process, what everyone suspected for a long time - that the NHL was whistling in the dark about its situation in Phoenix and that the losses were staggering. Not that we ever believed it before, but how are we supposed to now swallow Gary Bettman's happy talk when he tries to convince us things are going just swimmingly in markets such as Nashville, Florida and Atlanta?"

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  1. Munkcy
    1. Posted by Munkcy Wed May 20, 2009 4:27 pm EDT

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    As a Phoenix/Glendale resident, what incentive do you have to get emotionally invested in the Coyotes next year?
  2. Wilf
    2. Posted by Wilf Wed May 20, 2009 4:30 pm EDT

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    I like the way this is playing out. Bankruptcy is a resort to be used to get protection from creditors and to make sure that assets are distributed in an orderly and equitable fashion, and not as a Get Out of Jail card to relieve the team of its obligations to the League. I'm continually aghast at how Balsillie does business. I guess the RIM technology was just the golden goose that fell in his lap, 'cause he doesn't seem to display innate business or people skills.
  3. Wilf
    3. Posted by Wilf Wed May 20, 2009 4:32 pm EDT

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    At the end of the day, Moyes will end up signing over the franchise to the League, which now realizes he can't be propped up any longer. The League will give the team away to a local group for pennies on the dollar, but the local group will get a deal that allows them to sell or move unless they stop the red ink. Within 24 months the team is headed elsewhere.
  4. JohnB
    4. Posted by JohnB Wed May 20, 2009 4:42 pm EDT

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    Unless the 'yotes win the a cup (President or Stanley), they won't be getting anyone in the building anytime soon. I'd say for Bettman to keep this thing going until Basille backs out and then start looking at for another city to stick the team... Wait am I on Bettman's side? I think I may be sick, why is everything spinning...
  5. Jerk Store
    5. Posted by Jerk Store Wed May 20, 2009 4:49 pm EDT

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    munkcy hits the nail on the head
    they should be called the phoenix lame ducks
  6. wufpirate
    6. Posted by wufpirate Wed May 20, 2009 4:55 pm EDT

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    he said "pull out".
  7. scott g
    7. Posted by scott g Wed May 20, 2009 4:55 pm EDT

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    Wilf.. well said. I agree 100% I don't know if you're Canadian or not, but the speculation goin on over here is outrageous. Everyone think they know what is gonna happen, but it's all up to the courts. Your situation sounds like one of the most realistic i've heard thus far though....
  8. Saro G
    8. Posted by Saro G Wed May 20, 2009 5:01 pm EDT

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    They're gonna be like the Sonics during their last season in Seattle.
  9. habs1rule
    9. Posted by habs1rule Wed May 20, 2009 5:01 pm EDT

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    How is destroying your "Blackberry" going to hurt Balsillie, now you have to buy another one...Also, I read somewhere recently that Balsillie wanted to Borrow Millions to make his Hamilton dream a reality. Why does a Billionaire have to borrow??
  10. gaborik10m
    10. Posted by gaborik10m Wed May 20, 2009 5:05 pm EDT

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    I think Paul Allen should buy the team and bring them to Portland or Seattle
  11. Baker
    11. Posted by Baker Wed May 20, 2009 5:08 pm EDT

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    For the record, the current team in Winnipeg, the Manitoba Moose, are 1 win away from playing for the Calder Cup, the Stanley Cup of the AHL
    Just imagine if the Jets had stayed in Winnipeg. Oh, what could have been...
  12. almighty_muta
    12. Posted by almighty_muta Wed May 20, 2009 5:12 pm EDT

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    What does it take to have a moritorium on Phoenix Bankruptcy news?
    How about only on even numbered days?
  13. MJS2009
    13. Posted by MJS2009 Wed May 20, 2009 5:13 pm EDT

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    Actually, Wilf, I'm pretty sure Ballsillie is a pretty decent business man. Many of the best are successful because they are able to manipulate the systems in which they work to their advantage. The only problem with what Balsillie has done here is that the NHL and other leagues exist in a bubble. They exist with exemptions to antitrust laws and are generally allowed to set their own rules. What baffles me is that Balsillie was approved as an owner once, and then chose to use an underhanded approach in his subsequent tries. Balsillie seems to have taken Gary's ire after his second attempted purchase as personal, and not business, and now it seems that, while he could simply have applied to purchase the Coyotes, and likely have been successful, his desire to teach Bettman a lesson overcame him. That is evidenced by the argument made by his lawyer in court. Jim Balsillie's quasi-underhanded ways have likely led him to success in business, but he simply cannot work this way with a group of people that are as wealthy as he is and the league that represents them. The judge was essentially following a trend in litigation toward mediation, but ultimately seems to be leading up to the correct ruling blocking the sale to Balsillie. This has nothing to do with anyone's desire to have another team in Canada or Gary Bettman's agenda, this has everything to do with the rules established by the league, and what seems like an abuse of the bankruptcy system. While Jim seems like a Canadian hero now, if/when the judge rules against him and Moyes he will be anything but, and all because he felt like being an ass.
  14. abmjimmy
    14. Posted by abmjimmy Wed May 20, 2009 5:34 pm EDT

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    If the NHL can help Lemiuex to keep the pens in Pitt then they should do the same for Gretzky in Phoenix.
  15. FlyersFan
    15. Posted by FlyersFan Wed May 20, 2009 5:45 pm EDT

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    I heard the Thrashers might move to Hamilton. Anyone have details???
  16. blues_fan_mk
    16. Posted by blues_fan_mk Wed May 20, 2009 5:48 pm EDT

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    The problem with keeping the team in Phoenix is why would anyone buy a team if they were forced to keep it in a location that causes losses of about $25,000,000 per season ($300,000,000 over 12 years?) for the owner?
  17. alec b
    17. Posted by alec b Wed May 20, 2009 6:04 pm EDT

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    Who own da Chiefs?
  18. SNSW
    18. Posted by SNSW Wed May 20, 2009 6:07 pm EDT

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    I can't imagine the NHL can afford to give up on one of the largest markets in the United States (Phoenix) if so how does that spell the future of the rest of the currently troubled NHL. If the Coyotes leave Glendale what a wonderful concert hall they will leave behind.
    What a mess, will the NHL survive as we know it, in these economic times...
  19. alec b
    19. Posted by alec b Wed May 20, 2009 6:12 pm EDT

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    If I'm the judge, I'm ruling that the team has no or significantly decreased value without being an NHL franchise. If Baisille wants to move the team in a manner that violates NHL franchise rules, the league has the right to kick them out, making the franchise essentially worthless. Therefore, Baisille's offer, though on paper is higher than any other offer the team might get, the consequences of it would render the team worthless beyond liquidation.
    Though, I don't know if that stance changes the way the court would have to rule on Baisille's offer. It'd essentially be the same as someone saying: "I'll buy it and liquidate it."
  20. puck it dano
    20. Posted by puck it dano Wed May 20, 2009 6:31 pm EDT

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    And how can players be motivated to play in a mess like this...
  21. Tito "TD" O'Dell
    21. Posted by Tito "TD" O'Dell Wed May 20, 2009 6:58 pm EDT

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    Within months of Wysh's Portraits in Heroism features, Bettman began his clandestine approach to saving the Coyotes. By secretly taking over the franchise in November, then denying it repeatedly until Ballsillie forced the issue into the open, Bettman made all of his previous deceptions seem like little white lies.
    To protect his own long-held position that the whole mess was a fabrication of Shoalts and the Canadian press, Greg has, for the past few weeks, seemed to herald Bettman as a bona fide hero, with his not-so-subtle slant on this coverage.
    Oops.
    Maye it's time he drops any facade of objectivity on this issue and call for a Ballsillie: Portraits in Heroism art contest, and award the prize to the "Go for it, Canada" submission.
    A bigger Bettman apologist than Wysh, you will not find.
    Imagine the nerve of Balsillie, daring to try to circumvent the NHL's rules. How dare he, "without, you know, asking the NHL if it could".
    As if the answer would ever have been yes.
    Coming up after the jump: teenage Greg wants to throw a house party while his parents are out of town. Without, you know, asking them if he could. Wysh wants to sleep with that girl from the office. Without, you know, asking his wife if he could. And Greg wants to continue re-printing the most offensive Reader Comments. Without, you know, asking Yahoo if he could.
  22. yerry.take
    22. Posted by yerry.take Wed May 20, 2009 7:22 pm EDT

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    +1 @ Tito
    brilliant post, mate.
    Wyshynski the Smug Prick envisions himself as Eklund 2009: Saviour of the Coyotes.
  23. Michael L
    23. Posted by Michael L Wed May 20, 2009 7:52 pm EDT

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    It seems that Bettman and Co. were covering there own interests by not letting the team fold before the season started, and the only reason Moyes hung around was to try to recoop some of his loses, which he is attempting to do with Balsillie. Good for Moyes for forcing the league's hand; otherwise Bettman and Co would have raped everyone who had invested a dime in the team -- Moyes, Glendale, the fans -- by selling the team to MGM for pennies on the dollar, pretending to support a franchise in Phoenix for two more years and then moving the team to Las Vegas. What a sham. Balsillie is a hero for his part in exposing this legalized fraud for what it is. It is disgusting and usery of the worst kind -- the type of business practice that has contributed to our overall financial mess -- and I am surprised more people are not up in arms.

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