Imagine this: Don Cherry as head coach of an expansion NHL team located in Hamilton, Ont.

It nearly came to fruition at one point in the early 1990s, the Coach’s Corner icon explained to Jeff Marek and John Shannon on Hockey Central Saturday this past weekend.

As the NHL was looking to add two teams by the start of the 1992-93 season, Hamilton was among the handful of cities vying for an expansion franchise.

Two key players in Hamilton’s bid were Gerry Patterson and Ron Joyce. Patterson, a player agent and former executive director of the CFLPA, fronted the operation while Joyce, a co-founder of Tim Hortons, was going to help with the funding.

“We had it all set,” Cherry said. “Gerry Patterson had it all set up. At 12 o’clock when we went to bed we had the franchise. … I was going to be the coach. I was all ready to go.”

When they woke up, they didn’t.

Cherry continued: “[Eventual Tampa Bay Lightning co-founder] Phil Esposito comes on and says, ‘I’ve got the arena and I’ve got the dough.’ He didn’t have the arena and didn’t have a pot to … you know … he didn’t have anything. [Eventual Ottawa Senators founder] Bruce Firestone [also said] ‘I’ve got the arena and I’ve got the dough,’ [but he] didn’t have the arena; didn’t have the dough.”

Hockey Central Saturday Don Cherry stops by Hockey Central Saturday November 11 2017 Your browser does not support the audio element.



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The Vegas Golden Knights had to pay a $500-million expansion fee before their bid was approved, but back in the early 1990s the expansion fee was one tenth that cost.

Copps Coliseum, today called FirstOntario Centre, was the proposed home arena for the would-be Hamilton team. But Shannon explained Joyce wanted to negotiate with the NHL and instead of paying a lump sum of $50 million he wanted to split it up into two payments of $25 million spread across two years.

The league didn’t want that, nor did it necessarily want to expand into two Canadian markets at the same time.

“That’s why they’re in Tampa and that’s why they’re in Ottawa,” Cherry said before adding, “Hamilton would’ve been one of the best franchises.