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The National Hockey League said it has been in control of the Phoenix Coyotes since November and is asking a federal judge to throw out the team's bankruptcy filing.
NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes signed documents giving control of the team to the league. Daly said the documents specifically prohibit Moyes from taking the franchise into bankruptcy.
"We are filing a motion basically asking the judge to confirm that the league is in control of the club," Daly said, "and at that point we'll be able to dismiss all the claims in bankruptcy."
Daly spoke Thursday after a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on the franchise's filing for Chapter 11 reorganization on Tuesday. The filing, which came as a surprise to the NHL, includes a plan to sell the team to Canadian businessman Jim Balsillie for $212.5 million and move it to southern Ontario.
Judge Redfield Baum set a hearing for May 19 for arguments on who is in charge of the franchise and whether Moyes had the authority to file for bankruptcy.
The NHL wants to keep the team in Arizona and says it is in discussions with a prospective ownership group that includes Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Bulls.
The league has funded operation of the franchise since last August or September, and Moyes has signed documents turning over control of the team to the NHL "more than once," Daly said. He said the latest document was signed in November.
Court documents filed by Moyes said the team has lost $73 million over the past three years.
"I got into this thing kind of by accident," Moyes said in brief remarks outside the downtown Phoenix courthouse. "I loaned [previous owner] Steve Ellman $5 million one night to keep the team in Phoenix. Now I'm into it over $300 million. I'm going to be lucky to get $100 million out of it."
Moyes indicated he was open to another bid to buy the team.
"We have been in negotiations for six months to try to get various partnerships together, set the city involved, get concessions from the city," he said. "And we were just never able to get closure to this. If somebody wants to put a group together, I'll be glad to be part of it. ... But we've got to get commitments from everybody and the city and that's where it stands now."
Moyes said he had never been contacted by the Reinsdorf group.
Daly said that if Baum rules in favor of Moyes, the NHL still believes it will ultimately prevail and keep the franchise in Arizona.
"It won't be devastating to our position in this case, which is ultimately none of the relocation can happen and none of the sales procedure can happen without them coming through the league and league rules," Daly said.
Moyes' attorneys have filed a complaint contending that the NHL's control over relocation of teams violates federal antitrust law.
League members "have conspired with and through the NHL to maintain monopoly power in their `home markets' or `home territories' by refusing to allow the relocation of NHL clubs to markets where existing clubs currently have franchises," the document contends.
The move to Hamilton would invade areas already claimed by the Toronto Maple Leafs and Buffalo Sabres as their fan base.
Daly said NHL rules have been upheld by courts in the United States and Canada and he expects them to survive any challenges made in the Coyotes case.
The city of Glendale, where the Coyotes play in Jobing.com Arena, also believes it can prevent the team from leaving. The franchise signed a 30-year lease but Moyes and Balsillie believe that can be negated by a successful bankruptcy case. Glendale officials, though, argue the lease can't be broken without the $750 million payment it requires.
Balsillie, co-CEO of Blackberry maker Research In Motion, has twice before tried and failed to purchase an NHL team and move it to southern Ontario, in Pittsburgh and Nashville.
Representatives of Balsillie met with Hamilton officials Thursday to discuss a deal to use the city's Copps Coliseum. In Phoenix, Basillie spokesman Rich Rodier said he believed an agreement to use the Hamilton arena would be no problem.
Balsillie issued a statement saying he respected the court process. He also thanked the nearly 100,000 people he said responded on a Web site seeking their support for the Coyotes move.
"At the end of the day, this is about the passion Canadians feel for the game of hockey and a chance to provide those Canadian fans with the opportunity to support a seventh NHL team," Balsillie said. "Right now, the fans are signaling their enthusiasm in big numbers. That's what this is all about, great hockey fans in a great hockey market."
NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes signed documents giving control of the team to the league. Daly said the documents specifically prohibit Moyes from taking the franchise into bankruptcy.
"We are filing a motion basically asking the judge to confirm that the league is in control of the club," Daly said, "and at that point we'll be able to dismiss all the claims in bankruptcy."
Daly spoke Thursday after a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on the franchise's filing for Chapter 11 reorganization on Tuesday. The filing, which came as a surprise to the NHL, includes a plan to sell the team to Canadian businessman Jim Balsillie for $212.5 million and move it to southern Ontario.
Judge Redfield Baum set a hearing for May 19 for arguments on who is in charge of the franchise and whether Moyes had the authority to file for bankruptcy.
The NHL wants to keep the team in Arizona and says it is in discussions with a prospective ownership group that includes Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Bulls.
The league has funded operation of the franchise since last August or September, and Moyes has signed documents turning over control of the team to the NHL "more than once," Daly said. He said the latest document was signed in November.
Court documents filed by Moyes said the team has lost $73 million over the past three years.
"I got into this thing kind of by accident," Moyes said in brief remarks outside the downtown Phoenix courthouse. "I loaned [previous owner] Steve Ellman $5 million one night to keep the team in Phoenix. Now I'm into it over $300 million. I'm going to be lucky to get $100 million out of it."
Moyes indicated he was open to another bid to buy the team.
"We have been in negotiations for six months to try to get various partnerships together, set the city involved, get concessions from the city," he said. "And we were just never able to get closure to this. If somebody wants to put a group together, I'll be glad to be part of it. ... But we've got to get commitments from everybody and the city and that's where it stands now."
Moyes said he had never been contacted by the Reinsdorf group.
Daly said that if Baum rules in favor of Moyes, the NHL still believes it will ultimately prevail and keep the franchise in Arizona.
"It won't be devastating to our position in this case, which is ultimately none of the relocation can happen and none of the sales procedure can happen without them coming through the league and league rules," Daly said.
Moyes' attorneys have filed a complaint contending that the NHL's control over relocation of teams violates federal antitrust law.
League members "have conspired with and through the NHL to maintain monopoly power in their `home markets' or `home territories' by refusing to allow the relocation of NHL clubs to markets where existing clubs currently have franchises," the document contends.
The move to Hamilton would invade areas already claimed by the Toronto Maple Leafs and Buffalo Sabres as their fan base.
Daly said NHL rules have been upheld by courts in the United States and Canada and he expects them to survive any challenges made in the Coyotes case.
The city of Glendale, where the Coyotes play in Jobing.com Arena, also believes it can prevent the team from leaving. The franchise signed a 30-year lease but Moyes and Balsillie believe that can be negated by a successful bankruptcy case. Glendale officials, though, argue the lease can't be broken without the $750 million payment it requires.
Balsillie, co-CEO of Blackberry maker Research In Motion, has twice before tried and failed to purchase an NHL team and move it to southern Ontario, in Pittsburgh and Nashville.
Representatives of Balsillie met with Hamilton officials Thursday to discuss a deal to use the city's Copps Coliseum. In Phoenix, Basillie spokesman Rich Rodier said he believed an agreement to use the Hamilton arena would be no problem.
Balsillie issued a statement saying he respected the court process. He also thanked the nearly 100,000 people he said responded on a Web site seeking their support for the Coyotes move.
"At the end of the day, this is about the passion Canadians feel for the game of hockey and a chance to provide those Canadian fans with the opportunity to support a seventh NHL team," Balsillie said. "Right now, the fans are signaling their enthusiasm in big numbers. That's what this is all about, great hockey fans in a great hockey market."