NHL
will reportedly expand to Las Vegas: report
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[June 15, 2016]
(Reuters) - The NHL is
reportedly ready to bet on an expansion franchise in Las Vegas, a
move that would make the league the first to put a major
professional sports team in the resort city known primarily for
gambling.
An Associated Press report on Tuesday that was later confirmed by
the Las Vegas Review-Journal said putting a team in Las Vegas was a
"done deal" after the recommendation of the NHL's executive
committee and provided organizers pay a $500 million fee.
Both reports sourced two people who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to reveal the committee's
recommendation.
When asked by Reuters to comment on the news of expansion, NHL
Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in an email that the league had
no comment and would not confirm the report.
The NHL's Board of Governors are scheduled to meet on June 22 in Las
Vegas where they are expected to hold a formal vote on expansion
bids from Las Vegas and Quebec City.
The average NHL team is worth $505 million, according to a survey
released by Forbes last November.
 If owners vote to approve billionaire businessman Bill Foley's bid
for a franchise in Las Vegas, it would be the NHL's 31st team and
mark the league's first expansion since 2000 when Columbus and
Minnesota began play.
"We've grown up," Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman said in the Las
Vegas Review-Journal. "It’s an exciting step for us but I’m waiting
for the Board of Governors to approve it before I start to really
celebrate."
Las Vegas and Quebec City were the two cities who submitted official
applications for expansion when the NHL opened its formal expansion
process last year.
The bid from Quebec City, which lost its beloved Nordiques to Denver
in 1995, now looks like it will be put on hold due largely to
concerns about the strength of the Canadian dollar.
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Sharks defenseman Brent Burns (88) battles for the puck with
Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) in the third period of
game six of the 2016 Stanley Cup Final at SAP Center at San Jose.
Mandatory Credit: John Hefti-USA TODAY Sports

Canada's seven NHL teams earn ticket and concession revenue in
Canadian dollars while salaries, which account for half of the
league's hockey-related revenue, are paid in U.S. dollars.
Canada's currency has appreciated more than 10 percent since January
and settled at C$1.2853 to the U.S. dollar, or 77.80 U.S. cents, on
Tuesday. That's well below early 2013 levels when it last traded at
a premium to its American counterpart.
A spokesman from Quebecor Inc, the telecommunications and media
company behind the Canadian bid, told Reuters it would not comment
on what it called "rumors."
The NHL has previously said it received numerous expressions of
interest about joining the NHL over the past several years from
potential markets and ownership groups.
The earliest any expansion team could join the NHL would be the
2017-18 season.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Larry Fine/Steve
Keating)
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