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listen Listen: Jerry Weiers, Mayor of Glendale
The Mayor explains why the city of Glendale will not grant Greg Jamison an extension to buy the Phoenix Coyotes. Does he want the NHL team to stay in Glendale? And, what's next?

The Phoenix Coyotes situation in Arizona seems tenuous at best, as recent reports say prospective buyer Greg Jamison will be unable to purchase the team.

Jamison and his group of investors have until midnight Thursday to complete the deal under a previously arranged lease agreement, and as of now that seems unlikely to happen. Reports have surfaced that Jamison (or a lawyer representing him) have asked for an extension, but new Glendale Mayor Jerry Weiers says there has always been an understanding that the deadline was non-negotiable.

"Mr. Jamison and I have talked," Weiers told Arizona Sports 620's Burns and Gambo Thursday. "I had told him that I would honor the deal that the previous council had made. That's true today, but not a second past it."

Weiers said the stance has nothing to do with a desire to see hockey leave the desert; in fact, he and the council would prefer to keep the Coyotes around. However, as the economy continues to struggle, tough decisions have to be made.

"We want a professional hockey team here, but not when it's literally tied to the backs of our taxpayers at the same time that we're letting our law enforcement jobs go by the wayside and our fire," he said. "Public safety has got to be our very first priority, and as much as I want the Coyotes here, it can't be done on the backs of the taxpayers by sacrificing, trading public safety for hockey.

"We can't do it."

The deal, which had been agreed upon last year, would pay the franchise's owners $308 million over 20 years to manage Jobing.com Arena. The trick is balancing that cost with the revenue brought in by the team, which currently ranks last in the NHL in attendance. That's something Weiers and the city council have to weigh as it proceeds, as it is a very real possibility the team will leave if a deal is not reached soon.

"Obviously that's a concern that we all have, but I do know that the majority of the council -- including myself -- feel we can still accomplish the goal of keeping the team here, but we don't have to give the farm away to do it," he said. "I think if anybody wants a professional hockey team it needs to support itself."

Weiers said it is not and should not be government's position to decide which businesses succeed and which ones don't, adding it would not be fair to support a hockey team while other business are failing every day.

But professional hockey team is different from a regular business, and the mayor understands Glendale would take a hit if the Coyotes bolt.

"At the same time, we take a hit by keeping them here," Weiers said.

So the Coyotes are where they are: still without an owner, still hoping to stay in Arizona. The only difference is they may be less than a day away from officially having at least one foot out the door.

Weiers is well aware of that, and while he is pessimistic that something will get done by midnight Thursday, he's not yet ready to throw in the towel on hockey in the desert.

"If he can't pull it together I know that the council will not be willing to extend that, but I can also tell you we will entertain any offer anybody has that isn't going to set our city backwards, that will help us move forward, that will keep the Coyotes here and keep a professional hockey team," he said, admitting it may take a miracle to keep the team around. "I don't know anybody that doesn't want them here other than the Canadians. They'd rather have them up north of the border.

"If we can keep them here and not cost our taxpayers money, that's a win-win for everybody."

Adam Green, Web Content Editor - ArizonaSports.com

10 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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  • Abuse
    mesa mad man wrote...
    Tough
    Tough position for Glendale/the mayor to be in. Its really a lose lose. Either you break the bank trying to save the Coyotes, or you let them go and risk an empty arena and all the businesses that surround it going in the dumps.
  • Abuse
    enforcer wrote...
    Too bad
    They ran the numbers, the city is better off with the team than without. Westgate is going to be a ghost town. Expect more layoffs to glendale city workers due to the loss of tax revenue. Plus, Arizona loses out on income taxes from the players salaries, and that includes the game paycheck that visiting players get when they play here. I hope that they can get 41 Justin Beiber concerts to fill the empty dates. Oh well, I'll still be enjoying hockey on the center ice package and look forward to watching the fourth installment of the Roadrunners play at US Airways.
  • Abuse
    ex-distancerunner wrote...
    As a season ticket holder: I agree with the Mayor
    If Mr. Jamison strung everybody along all this time. From Shane Doan to the lady who waited on me in the Coyotes Den yesterday What else is he capable of? If he can't figure out the minds of a few fellow investors, how can he figure out the mind of a "potential" fan to get him in the seats? If a string along went to this point..There is an integrity problem with the man himself. He should have already been spending hours in Glendale smoothing feathers and making friends....This was my favorite Phoenix activity..I am sorry if it is so.
  • Abuse
    Lee A. wrote...
    Other Buyers
    The mayor also said during that interview that he was aware of a couple of "other entities" that were interested in purchasing the team. He wouldn't name them but wanna bet they both would move the team to Seattle, Portland, LV, Quebec?? This sucks.
  • Abuse
    HeyBaldy wrote...
    Turn out the lights
    Cut the cord and let them go. Bring in minor league hockey and maybe USA basketball, or just take the loss and sell the arena and move on.
  • Abuse
    azgbayfan wrote...
    Understand but..
    I certainly can see not caving on a bad deal, but is nothing better? Better have a good explanation for the residents. I don't think they are going to accept finger pointing at Jamison or the former council members
  • Abuse
    Lee A. wrote...
    Sell the Arena?
    Without an anchor tenant, who would buy that white elephant?
  • Abuse
    bobinchandler wrote...
    Exactly
    There isn't an "out" for the city. Set to pay out $15.4M a year for them to run the arena, it needs to bring in some serious cash FROM it! From the whole area. While mothballing the arena may save them operational money, it throws away their initial investment and dooms the surrounding merchants. And we all know, there are not enough concerts, circuses and truck pulls, split between Jobing and US Airways Center to make it work without a major tenant like the Coyotes.
  • Abuse
    bobinchandler wrote...
    one other thought...
    If I was Glendale, I'd research every single NBA and NHL team. Every minor league incarnation of the sports. Every lacrosse, volleyball, badminton, curling team I could find and work on bringing them here. Kevin Johnson can't get Sacramento to build a new place for the Kings? Come to Glendale and Jobing.Com Arena! There's plenty of love for a winner in town!
  • Abuse
    mr091468 wrote...
    If you live in Glendale,
    you've been had. Now they're threatening to fire cops and firemen because of a budget shortfall. Send the g.d. team to Canada and keep the cops and firemen.
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