What Glendale, Coyotes gained and lost in arena deal

After a tense month-long standoff and with a costly legal battle looming, the Arizona Coyotes and Glendale have agreed on potential changes to an arena-management deal that could save the city about $2 million per year.

UPDATE: Glendale council unanimously approves new Coyotes arena deal

The agreement also would expire in 2017, allowing the NHL team to move elsewhere a year sooner than under the existing agreement. The Glendale City Council will consider the proposal at a meeting Friday morning.

RELATED: Glendale and Coyotes say arena deal dispute is resolved

MORE: 6 things to know about proposed Coyotes arena deal

Here is a look at what each side gained and gave up in the compromise.

What the Coyotes gained

Roughly $6 million in ticket, parking and naming-rights revenue that went to Glendale under the previous agreement.

A termination date for the agreement of June 30, 2017. That is one year earlier than an out-clause under the previous deal that would have allowed the team to leave Glendale if the team's losses exceeded $50 million.

As part of an audit, Glendale is prohibited from inspecting team-owner records.

What Glendale gained

Arena-management fee the city pays the Coyotes is cut from $15 million annually to $6.5 million.

Glendale can hire a new arena manager in July 2016 if it gives the Coyotes notice of a change by April 2016.

The Coyotes agreed to terminate Craig Tindall, the team's general counsel, and not hire Julie Frisoni. Tindall is a former Glendale city attorney and Frisoni is a former Glendale assistant city manager.

What the Coyotes gave up

A 15-year agreement worth $225 million.

A claim against Glendale over terminating the deal that the Coyotes' attorneys said could have been worth more than $200 million in damages if successful.

What Glendale gave up

Assurance of an anchor tenant for Gila River Arena that would play 41 regular season home games for at least three more years and as many as 13 more years.

Close to $6 million in hockey, concert, parking and naming-rights revenue with possibly more revenue if the arena attracts more shows or the team generates more revenue by making the playoffs.

Photos: Saga of Coyotes arena deal with Glendale