Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan displays an NHL Seattle jersey at a press conference at City Hall, joined by council members Debora Juarez, Bruce Harrell and Rob Johnson. The podium graphic features Seattle’s 1917 NHL champion Metropolitans. / Art Thiel, Sportspress Northwest

Talk about a power play: About 24 hours after the city signed a deal to develop privately a  an arena worthy of the NHL, league owners at a meeting in Florida Thursday voted 31-0 to allow Seattle to begin the application for an expansion team in 2020 whose entry fee Commissioner Gary Bettman fixed at $650 million. That’s $150 million more than the most recent expansion team in Las Vegas was charged.

Not only did no one blink at a combined fee and arena cost of more than $1.3 billion, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan already had an NHL Seattle hockey jersey to unveil.

“I said yesterday we were on the right path, but I didn’t know it would happen so quickly,” Durkan said, grinning throughout a hastily called press conference at city hall.

On her seventh work day in office, she seemed a bit dazzled. Which was certainly understandable. Given all the rancorous dealings with her predecessors, as well as King County executives and state governors have had with pro sports teams since the 1960s, she just had drop in her political lap one of the most astonishing private-capital gifts in the business history of American sports.

None of the $1.3 billion comes from local taxpayers or local billionaires. It’s all outside money being thrown at Seattle and its rookie mayor just for the privilege of playing and singing amid our perceived coolness.

“They think this is the city to be in,” Durkan said, powering up her civic booster rocket. “They’re right. Seattle has a strong confluence of things they need: A strong economy, a great sports base and one of the fastest growing cities. Yet we don’t have these professional teams.”

And we still don’t. Amid the nothing-to-something suddenness, Bettman in Florida tried to pump the brakes a bit.

“That doesn’t mean we have granted an expansion team,” Bettman said following the Board of Governors meeting. “We have agreed as a league to take and consider an expansion application and to let them run in the next few months a season-ticket drive.”

Durkan said the drive, a standard early fixture of expansions in all leagues to make sure the marketplace is eager, hasn’t begun to be organized.

But hey — we’ve waited 100 years since the Metropolitans became the first U.S. team to win the Stanley Cup, and endured nine years of civic dither since the Sonics abandoned KeyArena. A couple of more months before permission is granted to throw down cash deposits is a trifle.

Oak View Group CEO Tim Leiweke, the mastermind behind the bid to renovate the 1962 World’s Fair leftover into a world-class venue, said at a Wednesday press briefing at Seattle Center that “you’re probably going to be surprised” at how fast things come together.

Late Thursday night, Leiweke sent out a statement:

“We appreciate the NHL allowing us to file an application for expansion for Seattle and the new Seattle Center Arena. We intend to file promptly. We look forward to launching a season ticket deposit campaign and demonstrating Seattle’s desire, interest, and intent on joining the National Hockey League. We look forward to providing details on this process in the near future and having the opportunity to demonstrate why Seattle would make a great NHL market.”

The signing of the memorandum of understanding between OVG Wednesday and the NHL vote Thursday in Florida were clearly choreographed for maximum optics to suggest to fans in two countries that Leiweke and the municipal government were in sync and operating efficiently at maximum warp drive.

Those are descriptors rarely associated with Seattle’s civic process.

After saying she talked to Leiweke by phone to learn of the NHL decision, Durkan reiterated the theme of urgency.

“I told him to get back to work,” she said. “We have a lot of benchmarks to meet.”

One of the long-term benchmarks has been a return of the NBA, an event now destined not to happen for at least several more years. As was reported here, probably not until near the end of the NBA’s TV rights-fee contracts with ESPN and TNT following the 2024-25 season, when Seattle could be joined by Mexico City, according to city and league sources.

Durkan is a big sports fan and a former girls basketball coach who made clear her passion is hoops over pucks. She knows convulsive history of the NBA and Seattle, suggesting she believes the league owners think the town is owed one.

“The NBA, they’re very sophisticated,” she said. “They are looking at Seattle and know, in a sense, we were wronged. We’re a city that should have an NBA team, We have a wonderful history here, and a great fan base. (But) it’s trickier, and a long-term horizon.”

It’s clear that Durkan, a trial lawyer of long experience, wants Leiweke accountable.

“First time I met him, I looked him in the eye and said, ‘You gotta tell me this arena works for basketball,'” she said. “He says it does. I believe him.

“We’ve got this now, and hockey is going to be great in Seattle.”

Optics done, serious work begins. There remains skepticism about the physical renovation feat (the excavation below the arena footings may hold drama worthy of Bertha’s highway tunnel escapade) and the financial lift (Leiweke believes there will be sufficient revenues from a busy, expensive building to give the hockey owners a one-third equity share and the basketball owners a one-third share). And there is the nightmare that an overbuilt Queen Anne neighborhood and an overbooked Seattle Center will create jams requiring airlift drops of food and water to trapped motorists.

Whatever the problems, Oak View and its partners are already committed $1.3 billion. What’s another $100 million for aircraft support?

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11 Comments

  1. Seattle Totems, Vancouver Canucks, if we could bring back the Portland Buckaroos!!!
    I am happy we are looking at Hockey, not sure I would ever go to another NBA game.
    Art I have to ask, don’t you guys like Husky basketball anymore?

    • Some fans permanently soured on the NBA after 2008. But by the time the Sonics get back here, few will be left who remember it.

      We hope to get after Huskies hoops, but it’s been a little busy lately. We need some help from readers. Have you and your closest 10,000 friends contributed to SPNW?

  2. I’ll believe it when the puck drops. But man, I’m super excited by the prospect of NHL hockey here in Seattle. Fingers crossed…

    • The city hopes there are thousands of you out there. Are you down for a season ticket when asked?

      • I wish. NHL season tickets sell way above my budget. I will look into a multi game plan, but even that may be a stretch. If it would mean giving up my Hawks tickets, it very quickly becomes a no.

  3. Firsat I read that Leiwicke would like an ownership share in the hockey team. Then Juarez wears a Metropolitans jersey in the photo above. I didn’t think there would be anything that would prevent me from buying Seattle NHL tickets. Now there are two.

  4. Some real irony in the Key Arena NHL announcement. Those who can recall “Billboard” Ackerley killing (by buying the application rights for $30k and walking out the back door of the NHL board meeting in Florida at the time!) any prospect for the NHL because of perceived competition with his Sonics NBA team.
    Now the NHL becomes Seattle’s new primary franchise (at an absolutely astounding price tag) coming to Seattle years ahead of the NBA.
    Meanwhile William “Bill” H. MacFarland RIP is looking down from his luxury suite in heaven shaking his head — not only at the $$$$ now being put forward but also knowing what could have been twenty years ago for pocket change.
    Yes, Art, I will buy NHL season ticket(s), but we’ll have to sell my inflated home’s value to buy them.