Las Vegas’ NHL ticket drive gaining traction; casinos to pay tribute to Jerry Tarkanian

If first impressions are anything to go by, Las Vegas’ ticket drive to bring an NHL team to Sin City is off to a very good start.

The ownership group of a prospective NHL franchise in Las Vegas, by lead investor Bill Foley and backed by the Maloof brothers, announced that it had received 5,000 deposits for season tickets in the first 36 hours of the ticket drive. That’s significant for a number of reasons.

For one, it’s already halfway to the 10,000-season ticket commitment set by the ownership group to show the NHL that there’s a healthy market for a new franchise. It also paints a pretty picture that Las Vegas can actually sustain a healthy chunk of fans who are committed to paying season ticket prices for a team that technically doesn’t exist yet.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman even paid a visit to Las Vegas last week to check in on the campaign and leaving impressed with the attention the campaign was generating. He stopped short of promising a franchise to the city but Las Vegas certainly helped its cause with the enthusiastic response to the ticket drive.

If the league does award a franchise to Las Vegas, the potential ownership group has already earmarked a new arena being built on the Strip as its home ice. The arena, which is scheduled to open in April 2016, is under development, a partnership between MGM Resorts International and Anschutz Entertainment Group and could hold as much as 17,5000 fans in an ice hockey setting.

Meanwhile, a handful of casinos along the Las Vegas Strip are set to do something it rarely does later this week.

According to multiple reports, Caesars Entertainment Corp. and MGM Resorts properties, Cosmopolitan, Stratosphere, Tropicana, Venetian and Palazzo will dim their lights to pay tribute to former University of Nevada-Las Vegas (UNLV) Coach Jerry Tarkanian who died on February 11, 2015.