UTVolCountry
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That's the same thing that happened to the Thrashers(having the same coach for far too long). I think though the Preds are far more committed to winning that the Thrashers ever were.
The Thrashers problem was that Atlanta is a terrible sports city. I don't know why, but the fact remains that Atlanta really only cares about College sports, then the Braves, Falcons, and Hawks if there's time.
They can try and make excusses. But the truth is nobody cared about them in Atlanta.
The Thrashers were successful in Atlanta as long as they remained under the Turner/Time Warner ownership umbrella. Attendance was good. The team seemed to be improving. What destroyed the Thrashers was being sold in a bundle with the Hawks to an ownership group never had any interest in owning the hockey team; their plan from the start was to flip the Thrashers ASAP. Unfortunately these nimrods started suing each other just a few months after the sale closed, meaning they couldn't sell the team to someone who wanted it. Meaning that for eight years the team was a driverless vehicle. They had a minimum payroll. They never bothered to change the incompetent GM. They made no effort to compete. They made no effort to keep Ilya Kovalchuk when his contract expired, which was the final straw for fans. Attendance finally cratered. Perhaps it's worth pointing out that up until, say, 2008 Atlanta outdrew Nashville in attendance every year, despite only making the playoffs once and never winning a single playoff game.
Anyway, EVEN THEN the team didn't move because "nobody cared." The Thrashers moved because, after eight years, the owners finally resolved their lawsuit. As soon as I read that in the paper, I turned to the wife and told her that the team would be gone within a year. And sure enough, they were sold almost immediately to the first bidder, and that bidder was in Winnipeg. Ownership killed NHL hockey in Atlanta, not apathy.
The Thrashers were successful in Atlanta as long as they remained under the Turner/Time Warner ownership umbrella. Attendance was good. The team seemed to be improving. What destroyed the Thrashers was being sold in a bundle with the Hawks to an ownership group never had any interest in owning the hockey team; their plan from the start was to flip the Thrashers ASAP. Unfortunately these nimrods started suing each other just a few months after the sale closed, meaning they couldn't sell the team to someone who wanted it. Meaning that for eight years the team was a driverless vehicle. They had a minimum payroll. They never bothered to change the incompetent GM. They made no effort to compete. They made no effort to keep Ilya Kovalchuk when his contract expired, which was the final straw for fans. Attendance finally cratered. Perhaps it's worth pointing out that up until, say, 2008 Atlanta outdrew Nashville in attendance every year, despite only making the playoffs once and never winning a single playoff game.
Anyway, EVEN THEN the team didn't move because "nobody cared." The Thrashers moved because, after eight years, the owners finally resolved their lawsuit. As soon as I read that in the paper, I turned to the wife and told her that the team would be gone within a year. And sure enough, they were sold almost immediately to the first bidder, and that bidder was in Winnipeg. Ownership killed NHL hockey in Atlanta, not apathy.
