Dallas is eliciting a [expletive] of bad publicity for horrible attendance. The announced attendances are all 5k-10k... but the actual number for a few of these games is guesstimated in the 2k-5k range. Dallas is a proven hockey market, so it's not in the same abyss as Atlanta (was), Phoenix, or Miami. Who knows how much the Rangers have to do with it, but I'm sure a big factor is the universal hatred of Tom Hicks down there. The team should be sold to Dan Gaglardi by the end of the year, so it's likely that market will recover with an actual owner, actual management team, and actual marketing team. The current perspective is at an all-time trough. Phoenix, unsurprisingly, is doing a hair better. Of course, while Phoenix might have slightly higher attendance numbers, A LOT of that quantity was accounted from visiting team invasions by the likes of Winnipeg & Chicago fans. Greg Jamison's (former San Jose Sharks CEO) bid to purchase the Coyotes is beginning to lose its wheels, as many of the potential investors are pulling out after a more serious, in depth look at the market. It will likely be Jerry Reinsdorf (who we don't know how serious he is... is he being used to drive up the price to account for the NHL's previous losses, or is he legitimately trying to buy the team but on the cheap?) or Quebec Nordiques for the Coyotes. Miami's (or Florida if you will, [expletive] Wayne Huzienga) local TV Ratings speak for itself (worst for just about any pro team), but the team is still safe for now. The ownership makes a lot of bank on the area, land, and development around the stadium. I'd still keep an eye on the Panthers this decade, however. If Hamilton or Hartford (or the unlikely scenario of a shared stadium with the Maple Leafs... though minimal chance of such under MLSE's ownership) comes about this decade, the Panthers are a real possibility if the situation fails to improve. Another day, another stadium proposal on Long Island. Right by Belmont I believe. But no mass transit has kept Charles Wang quiet for the time being. If nothing's ever worked out, it might be Brooklyn or bust for the historic Islanders. Columbus was able to successfully establish a real grassroots fan base despite its perennial loser status for the first 10 years. Unfortunately, the wheels appear to be coming off in 2011-2012, fueled by a 1-9-1 start. I still believe a new GM, and an offensive stud in the draft can turn things around. That's it for dire situations in the NHL, limited to these 5 IMO. I think Dallas is 95% safe, Columbus 90% safe, Florida 85%, Long Island 75%, and Phoenix 40% to stick for the next 5 years. Every other market/franchise appears to be doing well, except maybe Colorado. But many Avalanche fans flocked to the minor league Eagles, who are threatening the Avalanche's sellout streak in upcoming years. The hockey market is improving (i.e. youth hockey numbers), but people have decided to switch their egress hockey dollars to the Eagles and/or don't share goodwill with the Colorado owner. Edmonton's on the verge of a new downtown arena after decades in a poorly located suburb (and still selling out). Matt Hulsizer's just purchased the St. Louis Blues, who have had fantastic local TV Ratings in spite of the Cardinals' run (and have generally drawn well even with some of the franchise's poorest hockey since the lockout). On a 2012 NHL Draft note, Alex Galchenyuk tore his ACL. Galchenyuk was expected to be a Top 3-5 pick, but now looks like a steal for someone else. I mention this because Galchenyuk (who is Russian and was born in Milwaukee) is a Chicago hockey product, playing his most critical year with CYA before become the OHL's #1 Overall draft pick with the Sarnia Sting.