Current:Home > MarketsEarly reaction to Utah Hockey Club is strong as it enters crowded Salt Lake market -VisionFunds
Early reaction to Utah Hockey Club is strong as it enters crowded Salt Lake market
View
Date:2025-04-25 22:05:09
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Utah Jazz did more than carve out a place in this city.
They became a Salt Lake City institution, continuing to draw sellout crowds long after Stockton-to-Malone eventually turned into a rebuilding team that very well could be going on year three of missing the playoffs.
Turns out there is room for more than one major professional team in town.
The arrival of the team formerly known as the Arizona Coyotes sparked enormous interest with more than 34,000 season-ticket deposits made in the first 48 hours after becoming available. And only 8% of those deposits for the Utah Hockey Club also were Jazz season-ticket holders, which means even more customers for Ryan and Ashley Smith, who own both teams.
“So we immediately became very, very bullish on the demand from the community,” said Chris Barney, Smith Entertainment Group president of revenue and commercial strategy. “Another really interesting nuance about that group is 63% of those people hadn’t even been to an arena event in a year. You don’t really get the chance in sports to cultivate a new audience.”
The Jazz, who moved to Salt Lake in 1979 after five years in New Orleans, created fans for the future by developing them when they were young through Junior Jazz. Barney said it’s the nation’s largest youth basketball program, and the idea is to create a similar legacy in hockey.
But the Utah Hockey Club plans to buttress existing programs rather than dictate the path of youth programs. The Utah Outliers junior team won championships the past three years and plans to expand its 17- to 20-year-old program with younger teams as it moves into a new 2,000-seat facility in Park City, Utah.
Having the NHL in the neighborhood, Outliers general manager and coach Paul Taylor hopes, will only increase interest among potential younger players.
“I think once the team starts, you’re going see a lot of interest, and kids are going to start choosing the hockey stick over a basketball or soccer ball or football,” Taylor said.. "... It just builds their dreams when the best players in the world come into your backyard and they’re part of your community fabric as your home team.”
Beyond cultivating a young fan base, there’s also the task of educating those who haven’t watched hockey much, if at all, but are curious.
There also could be those with a mild interest in the sport, having watched an occasional game on TV, but who don’t have a firm grasp on the difference between icing and offside.
“But we also know there’s hockey people here,” said Travis Henderson, senior vice president for broadcasting for the UHC and Jazz. “So (it’s) just striking that balance of teaching and elevating the game but not talking down to the hockey fans we know are here and have watched their whole lives. So it’s an interesting balance, but we’re aware of it.”
Utah games will be televised over the air and available through a streaming service that also includes behind-the-scenes content. Several streaming packages are available, including one that combines the UHC and Jazz.
The Utah Hockey Club is the shiny new toy, and the metropolitan area of more than 1.2 million people has already shown great enthusiasm for a team that played in Arizona State University’s 5,000-seat arena the past two years.
“I think the reaction has been about as good as anyone could expect,” longtime Salt Lake sports talk radio co-host Patrick Kinahan said. “This town is ready to explode to be a big-time sports town, and hockey gets them one step closer to that. I went to the first preseason game just to get a feel.
“It felt like it was (a) late-season Jazz game with the momentum of the team going to the playoffs.”
Utah has a young corps of players led by Clayton Keller and a defense upgraded with some offseason moves that included trading for Mikhail Sergachev. General manager Bill Armstrong has built mostly through the draft, and he is hesitant to forecast whether the team can make a legitimate push for the playoffs this season.
He prefers to stick with the day-to-day approach for Utah, which opens its season Oct. 8 at home against the Chicago Blackhawks.
“We are probably still the second- or third-youngest team in the National Hockey League,” Armstrong said. “That’s part of the rebuild. Some nights, you’re going to look like world beaters and win 9-0, and other nights, you’re not going to do that.”
There is a lot of competition for the attention of sports fans in the area beyond the NHL and NBA teams. BYU and Utah are Power Four Conference teams with passionate fan bases. Real Salt Lake of the MLS averages more than 20,000 fans.
How long the honeymoon lasts for the NHL team remains to be seen.
“I don’t really ever put a time stamp on it,” Barney said. “We’re in the middle of a 292-game sellout streak for the Jazz and we haven’t made the playoffs two years in a row. If you would have been at our last regular-season game against the Rockets this last season, you would have been like, ‘Are these guys both chasing a playoff spot for home-court advantage?’ Our fans are just incredible.”
But he also acknowledged the reality of how the bottom line can affects fans’ overall experience.
“There is something and our data shows this,” Barney said. “Hot dogs are warmer and drinks are colder when we win.”
___
AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/NHL
veryGood! (2742)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- U.S. destroys last of its declared chemical weapons
- Heather Rae and Tarek El Moussa's Baby Boy Tristan Undergoes Tongue-Tie Revision
- Target recalls weighted blankets after reports of 2 girls suffocating under one
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- In defense of gift giving
- In Alaska’s North, Covid-19 Has Not Stopped the Trump Administration’s Quest to Drill for Oil
- The Fight to Change US Building Codes
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Donations to food banks can't keep up with rising costs
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Kim and Khloe Kardashian Take Barbie Girls Chicago, True, Stormi and Dream on Fantastic Outing
- No New Natural Gas: Michigan Utility Charts a Course Free of Fossil Fuels
- The overlooked power of Latino consumers
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Renewable Energy’s Booming, But Still Falling Far Short of Climate Goals
- Chevron’s ‘Black Lives Matter’ Tweet Prompts a Debate About Big Oil and Environmental Justice
- You'll Whoop It up Over This Real Housewives of Orange County Gift Guide
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Britain is seeing a wave of strikes as nurses, postal workers and others walk out
We battle Planet Money for indicator of the year
In a year marked by inflation, 'buy now, pay later' is the hottest holiday trend
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
On Florida's Gulf Coast, developers eye properties ravaged by Hurricane Ian
Twitter suspends several journalists who shared information about Musk's jet
Kelly Ripa Details the Lengths She and Mark Consuelos Go to For Alone Time