Ottawa Senators officially for sale - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa Senators officially for sale

The Ottawa Senators have officially announced the team is going up for sale, saying any new ownership would not be allowed to move the team from the city.

Team says it will require new owners keep it in Ottawa

A hockey player on a darkened rink with projections of the Ottawa Senators logo.
The Ottawa Senators have officially announced the team is going up for sale. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

The Ottawa Senators have officially announced the team is going up for sale, saying any new ownership would not be allowed to move the team from the city.

A news release from the team Friday said "a process has been initiated for the sale of the Ottawa Senators Hockey Club."

"This was a necessary and prudent step to connect with those deeply interested parties who can show us what their vision is for the future of the team," said team chairman Sheldon Plener in the statement.

"A condition of any sale will be that the team remains in Ottawa."

The NHL teamwouldn't comment earlier this week whenLos Angeles-based Sportico reported the Senatorshired a sport banking firm that helps in team sales.Canadian superstar Ryan Reynolds seems to have expressed interest in buyingthe team.

The impending salecomesafterthe death of owner Eugene Melnyk, who left the team to his two daughters, Anna and Olivia.

New arena deal in the works

The team has a preliminary agreement to once again work toward a new downtown arena at LeBreton Flats, with the next update expected in January. A previous deal fell apart in 2019.

That arena process is seen as a key part of the sale, with the team's current home in the western suburb of Kanata approaching 30 years of use.

A wide shot of the Ottawa Senators stands and rink.
The ice in the Canadian Tire Centre during Senators training camp Sept. 22, 2022. The arena opened in January 1996. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Arena projects often see the proponents asking the city to chip in, and with LeBreton Flats falling on Crown land, the federal government and the City of Ottawamay both be asked to help pay for theSenators' new home.

Ottawa's mayor-electMark Sutcliffesaid in an email Wednesday that he does not support taxpayer money going toward the construction of a new arena "regardless of its location."

When the cost of a new arena is added in, an incoming owner is easily looking at a totalinvestment north of $1 billion, said the team's original owner Bruce Firestone this week.

Ottawa has lost four straight games and six of its first 10 this season, putting the team at thebottom of the Atlantic division.

The Senators haven'tmade the playoffs since 2017.

(CBC)