SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Hockey Club management insists it's an expansion team and, as far as the NHL is concerned and the way records will be kept, that's true.
But in a more practical sense, Utah is a relocated franchise.
It's mostly the same team that took the ice last season as the Arizona Coyotes with the same head coach and the same general manager.
Utah opens its first season in Salt Lake City on Tuesday night against the Chicago Blackhawks.
If previous relocated franchises are a guide, Utah also fits the definition because it could be on the verge of becoming an annual playoff contender given its core of young players. History has been kind to other teams that have changed cities, with many clubs winning right away and even capturing championships not long after arriving in their new homes.
''I think it's just been when (teams have) moved, they've generally been bought by bigger, richer organizations that can support them better than where they were,'' said award-winning hockey historian Eric Zweig, who has authored several books on the NHL. "Arizona wasn't always terrible when they first got there. But they never really had stable ownership.
''There aren't many organizations in the NHL outside of the Coyotes that aren't run by wealthy companies anymore. I mean, it's almost impossible not to.''
Ryan and Ashley Smith, who head up the Smith Entertainment Group, own the UHC as well as the NBA's Utah Jazz and are power players in a downtown Salt Lake City redevelopment project.