May 1, 2012, A Long (Island) goodbye? column for HockeyPrimeTime.com
A Long (Island) goodbye? |
Columns | |
Written by Denis Gorman | |
Monday, April 30, 2012 18:06 | |
The New York Islanders will see the lease at Nassau Coliseum expire following the 2014-15 season and the divorce of team from county is well underway.
The divorce proceeding between has begun.
Already, it has been predictably ugly. And the
dissolution of this marriage promises to get much worse before the New
York Islanders and Nassau County walk away from each other.
The tenuous relationship between franchise and
municipality may have been permanently fissured with Town of Hempstead
supervisor Kate Murray’s comments to Newsday reporter Patrick Whittle regarding the status of Nassau Coliseum.
Nassau Coliseum, opened in 1972, is the
second-oldest active arena in the NHL, behind only Madison Square
Garden. The Islanders’ lease expires following the 2014-15 season, and
both NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and owner Charles Wang have publicly vowed the franchise will not play in the decaying arena after the lease is up.
Islanders general manager Garth Snow
compared the arena to “an Auto Lodge,” during a press conference prior
to the start of the Islanders’ 2010 training camp, and said the
building’s lack of amenities made it impossible for the Islanders to
compete in the free agent market. That has led to the Islanders having
the lowest average cap hit and lowest average salaries the last four
seasons.
The once bore the moniker Fort Neverlose during the
dynasty days. Now it could now be re-titled Camp No One Shows Up. The
Islanders’ 28th-ranked attendance in 2006-07 was their highest post-lockout.
Murray told Whittle that the Town of Hempstead
“adopted our zone for the Coliseum area. Because this was such a jewel
in the crown property, we created a zone that is sustainable from an
economic standpoint. We want the visionaries, the landowners, Nassau
County, to have as much flexibility as they seek a developer.
“We don’t make it a dead requirement that Nassau
Coliseum be demolished or refurbished. We’re willing and able to
segregate it out. We specifically don’t want to impose a vision. We want
good commerce that we can sustain. Nassau County has the prerogative to
create the vision. We have our prerogative as zone-okayers,” Murray
said.
She also took a pointed and calculated shot at the Islanders, who haven’t qualified for the playoffs since 2007.
“These are low days for the NHL,” Murray said. “With the Rangers, it’s exciting.”
Murray’s comments to Newsday came a week after Bettman told the Associated Press Sports Editors
that the Islanders and league are “continuing to explore and look at
the options. But it’s clear that Nassau County and the Town of Hempstead
don’t seem to be invested in having a new arena in the place that
probably makes the most sense, namely where the Nassau Coliseum is.”
The league, the Islanders, the Town of Hempstead
and Nassau County are engaged in a high-stakes game of chicken; one in
which neither side has shown any inclination to find common ground
outside of collective agreement that the Coliseum’s usefulness in 2012
is roughly equivalent to that of the Conestoga wagon.
Yet the end game will see the Islanders leave a region in which they were once an integral part of its fabric.
*****
Pathetic Neanderthals spewed racist garbage via social media platforms directed toward Joel Ward
after the Washington Capitals right wing scored the Game 7 overtime and
Eastern Conference Quarterfinal series-winning goal against the Boston
Bruins last Wednesday night.
Yet Ward’s response to the bigots — his teammate left wing Jason Chimera,
correctly termed the bigots as “idiots out there who ruin a beautiful
moment for someone,” following the Capitals’ practice Friday at Kettler
Iceplex — was proof again that class supersedes idiocy.
Photos by Getty Images
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Last Updated on Tuesday, May 01, 2012 03:00 |
http://www.hockeyprimetime.com/news/columns/a-long-island-goodbye
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