After 35-year absence, Western Hockey League returning to Winnipeg - Action News
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Manitoba

After 35-year absence, Western Hockey League returning to Winnipeg

The Western Hockey League board of governors has approved the move of the Kootenay Ice to Winnipeg from British Columbia.

Relocated Kootenay franchise will retain Ice name, play at U of M until 4,500-seat Oak Bluff rink is ready

The Kootenay Ice will be renamed the Winnipeg Ice as the team resettles on the Prairies. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

In a move that surprises few hockey-watchers, the board of governors of the Western Hockey League hasapproved the move of the KootenayIce to Manitoba from Cranbrook, B.C.,effective for the 2019-20 season.

The team will be called the Winnipeg Ice, according to owners of the major junior hockey club who made the announcement Tuesday afternoonin Oak Bluff, just outside Winnipeg's city limits.

The team will become the second WHL team in the province, along with the Brandon Wheat Kings, and joina crowded hockey market in and around Manitoba's capital, dominated by the Jets of the National Hockey Leagueandthe American Hockey League'sManitoba Moose.

Ice co-owner GregFettes said in addition to bringing the team to Winnipeg there areplans to take an "integrated approach to hockey development."

A new 4,500-seat rink will be built, likely near Oak Bluff. Tickets are projected to cost $15-$35 per seat at the new arena, once it's built.

The team will, for its first two years,play out of the University of Manitoba's 1,400-seat Wayne Fleming Arena asthe new arena is built outside Winnipeg. The partnership with the U of M will lead to a new scoreboard, dressing room renovations and a planned expansion of seating capacity.

Prices for Winnipeg Ice tickets at the U of M arena haven't been released but fans can reserve seats beginning Wednesday morning.

Managementalso plans to launch a Rink Hockey Academy training facility to help young players develop. The facility will have 9,000 square feet of dressing room space, as well as a classroom, therapy medical area, sauna, pool, yoga studio and more.

"We obviouslyrealizethat there'sgoingto be lots of competition in Winnipeg for hockey dollars," saidFettes.

"Big picture for us [is] we really feel we need a facilitythatwill make this more about entertainment dollars and not hockey dollars, and the entertainment centre is going to do that."

The local ownership group will be called 50 Below Sports and Entertainment and focus on providing a "family and millennial-focusedfan experience that's unique."

The group also announced Tuesday it will buythe Winnipeg Blues, a Manitoba Junior Hockey League team.

Declining attendance in Cranbrook

In a news release issued by theWHL, league commissioner Ron Robison said it was a "difficult decision" to move the team, but one that was based onlow attendance for the team in Cranbrook.

"After many years of monitoring the operations of the Kootenay Ice, it is evident this franchise is not viable in the market moving forward," Robison said in the release.

Average attendance for the team dipped toaround 2,500 a game in the fall.

"We'd seen many years of declining attendance but we were excited about the possibilities, and we really went all in on Cranbrook," said Fettes.

Robison joined Iceowners Fettes andMatt Cockellat the announcementinOak Bluff. Fettes said the desire to own a WHL team stems from a love for the game he shared with Cockell.

"We'd talk constantly about the possibility of one day owning a WHL team," he said.

Fettes and Cockell, both from Winnipeg, acquired the franchise in April2017 fromthe Chynoweth family.

Ownership was transparent with fans inCranbrookabout the challenges of keeping a team there, Fettes said. In the first sixmonths of ownership inCranbrookticket sales were up and the business community embraced the team, but things didn't pan out.

Winnipeg hasn't had a major junior team since 1984

Fettesis the founder of 24-7 Intouch, a global customer service outsourcing company, and Cockellis a former True North Sports and Entertainment executive.

Cockell previously coached the Brandon Wheat Kings and was a goaltending consultant with the gold medal-winningCanadian women's hockey team at the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Kootenay Ice majority owner Greg Fettes purchased the team in 2017. (Twitter.com)

Winnipeg's last foray into the major junior ranks ended badly in 1984 with the demise of theWarriors, a team that suffered from poorattendance and a succession of under-performingteams.

In the news release issued by the WHL, Fettessaid the timing to make the announcement was out of respect for the community the team leaves behind and the team going forward.

"The decision to announce prior to the end of the season felt like the right thing to do in order to allow the city of Cranbrook and the ICE to prepare for the future and put an end to the speculation surrounding the franchise," Fettessaid.

Fettessaid Mark Chipman, chair of the board for True North Sports and Entertainment which owns the Winnipeg Jets and the Manitoba Moosehas been an ally and mentor who has helped make the transition into Winnipeg easier.

TrueNorth previously explored the possibility of purchasing a WHL franchise, before the Manitoba Moose brought AHL hockey back to the city in2015.

"TrueNorthchose insteadto have the Manitoba Moose serve as Bell MTS Place's second tenant," Rob Wozny, vice-president of True North, said in a statement.

"That decision has proven to serve both the Moose and Jets extremely well and has become a critical aspect in the development of our players.Accordingly, we cannot overstate our commitment to our investment in the AHL in Winnipeg."

True North said it has a long-standing relationship with Fettesand wishes the Winnipeg Ice the best as the team re-settles.

Winnipeg Ice becomes the second WHL team in the province

6 years ago
Duration 2:06
The Kootenay Ice will be renamed the Winnipeg Ice as the team moves to Manitoba from Cranbrook, B.C

With files from Bryce Hoye