12/12/2009 (12:45 pm)

Ice Edge closes in on deal for Coyotes

Filed under: technology |

A Toronto group could be closing in on a purchase of the Phoenix Coyotes hockey team.

The National Hockey League could finalize a deal for Ice Edge Holdings to buy the Coyotes in the coming days, according to sources familiar with the situation.

Officials familiar with the negotiations between the NHL and various ownership groups said that other groups are still talking to the NHL but Ice Edge was the farthest along in the talks. They also said Ice Edge was talking to the NHL regarding some unconventional financing to help get the deal done.

Details of what the entails were not disclosed. Ice Edge has been meeting with NHL officials as well as the city of Glendale. The Phoenix suburb owns Jobing.com Arena where the Coyotes play.

The team is in Chapter 11 bankruptcy and is owned by the NHL. The league bought the team for $140 million in October after a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge turned down a $243 million offer by Research in Motion CEO Jim Balsillie to buy the team from the then owner Jerry Moyes and move them to Hamilton, Ontario.

Ice Edge had put in a $148 million bid for the Coyotes this summer during bankruptcy proceedings but pulled back that offer. The investment group restarted talks with the NHL after the league acquired the financially struggling team no fax payday loans.

Ice Edge had talked about keeping the team in Arizona but playing some Coyotes home games outside of the Phoenix market in Canadian cities without NHL teams. The ownership group won’t start formal arena lease negotiations with Glendale until after a deal with the NHL is struck.

The Coyotes have done well on the ice this year but struggle with attendance and finances. The team is averaging 9,774 announced fans per game, according to ESPN. That’s the lowest average in the NHL and among the major pro sports leagues in the U.S.

In November, Forbes magazine pegged the Coyotes as being worth $138 million, the lowest value in the NHL.

Neither Ice Edge or the NHL responded to requests for comment. Coyotes spokesman Rob Crean referred questions to the NHL. Glendale spokeswoman Jennifer Stein declined comment.

The Coyotes have lost $300 million since moving to the Phoenix market from Winnipeg in 2002. They’ve not made the NHL playoffs since 2002 and lost many of its ticket buyers after Moyes put the team into Chapter 11 in May.

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