NHL will expand to Las Vegas for 2017-18 season

SHARE NHL will expand to Las Vegas for 2017-18 season
tmobile_arena_las_vegas_featured_640x4241.png

T-Mobile Arena, opened in April, will be the home of the new Las Vegas NHL team. (Getty Images)

LAS VEGAS — The NHL is betting big on Las Vegas.

The league’s Board of Governors and commissioner Gary Bettman made it official on Wednesday that the NHL will expand to Las Vegas, with the league’s 31st team beginning play in the 2017-18 season. It was a unanimous decision. An expansion draft will be held next summer, during which each team will lose one player. The new team will make its selections on June 20, 2017, and the picks will be announced the following day.

The NHL becomes the first of the major pro sports leagues to put a team in Las Vegas.

“It’ll be an exciting place to come and play,” Blackhawks winger Patrick Kane said. “I think with expansion in the first place, it’s obviously good for the league, good for players — get more jobs, get more players in the league, and at the same time produce more revenue. I think Vegas would be a great venue. I’m sure they’ll probably have a pretty good home record. But at the same time, it’ll be fun for a lot of us to visit and play somewhere different, too. I don’t think you ever envision playing hockey in a place like this.”

The league deferred a decision on Quebec City, which also applied for expansion. Bettman cited the struggling Canadian dollar and the geographic imbalance of the league (with Las Vegas, there are 15 teams in the Western Conference and 16 in the Eastern Conference) as reasons to delay the decision, and there is no timetable to revisit Quebec City’s bid or potentially add a 32nd team to balance out the conferences.

Las Vegas owner Bill Foley will pay a $500-million expansion fee. The last time new teams entered the league, in 2000, the Minnesota Wild and Columbus Blue Jackets paid $80 million.

Players in town for Wednesday’s NHL Awards show shrugged off any concerns about players falling victim to the Vegas nightlife the night before games.

“I don’t think so,” Dallas captain Jamie Benn said. “We’re all adults, we’re all professionals. If we’re coming into this city obviously it’s an exciting city to come into, but we’re coming in here to do a job.”

Said Islanders captain John Tavares: “Obviously, there can be a lot of distractions coming here. Teams are going to find the best way to handle those things and stay focused on playing the game. Speaking for myself, when you go play, you take it very seriously. You want to be as best prepared as you can be, so you want to take care of yourself. There’s time to be with your teammates and enjoy the camaraderie that comes with that. No question, as players you want to be smart with the situations you’re in, and obviously that emphasis is probably [stronger] in a place like Las Vegas.”

Email: mlazerus@suntimes.com

Twitter: @marklazerus

The Latest
The massive pop culture convention runs through Sunday at McCormick Place.
With all the important priorities the state has to tackle, why should Springfield rush to help the billionaire McCaskey family build a football stadium? The answer: They shouldn’t. The arguments so far don’t convince us this project would truly benefit the public.
Art
“Chryssa & New York” is the first museum show in North America in more than four decades to spotlight the artist. It also highlights her strong ties to Chicago’s art world.
If these plans for new stadiums from the Bears, White Sox and Red Stars are going to have even a remote chance of passage, teams will have to drastically scale back their state asks and show some tangible benefits for state taxpayers.
The Bears put the figure at $4.7 billion. But a state official says the tally to taxpayers goes even higher when you include the cost of refinancing existing debt.