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Atlanta could be hot stuff for third try at NHL expansion with new arena deal

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Three times could be the charm for the National Hockey League to put another team in Atlanta.

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Failed history won’t be a deterrent, listening to backers of a proposed new arena in Forsyth County.

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After the Flames and Thrashers failed to draw consistently at two downtown facilities — the Omni and Philips Arena, respectively — the county, about a 45-minute drive northeast of Atlanta and business partners went through numerous procedural hoops this week to clear a $3 billion US project called The Gathering, which would feature an 18,500-seat rink.

The deal only commits to using taxpayer funds if the NHL grants an expansion team.

The NHL has been coy on expansion, but has carried a torch for the highly populated, TV-ratings-rich region since the Flames first arrived in 1972. If this project makes the rink the crown jewel of a new entertainment district, where the other two didn’t, it will be worth the trip out of town.

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In Atlanta’s favour, despite calls in Canada to give Quebec City or a second Toronto franchise a shot, is the impressive winning streak that two Deep South teams have been on. The Florida Panthers are chasing a second straight Stanley Cup in their third appearance in the final after the Tampa Bay Lightning won back-to-back in 2020 and 2021.

The league’s two most-recent additions, Las Vegas and Seattle, have been a success with the Golden Knights bringing the Cup to the desert in 2023.

Vernon Krause, who owns a chain of car dealerships and fronts The Gathering, told local media he spoke with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman on Monday and they’ll meet again in the early summer.

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Atlanta, or another entry, would alter the balance of the 32-team league’s two conferences, thus another would eventually be needed in the West.

A city long thought to be an expansion favourite is Houston, with its natural sports rivalry with Dallas and a long hockey history with minor pro teams and the World Hockey Association’s Aeros.

The league already has met with a group headed by Houston billionaire Dan Friedkin, who owns a share of the English Premier League club Everton. The Toyota Center in Houston, home of the NBA Rockets, can seat 17,800 for hockey.

lhornby@postmedia.com

X: @sunhornby

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