
Minneapolis:
Pros - Minnesota loves hockey. It would make for a crazy rivalry with the Wild. It puts another franchise out west (ish) for geographic purposes.
Cons - Lower down on the population totem pole (48th). With the Wild, and tons of good college teams, can the Twin Cities support another team?
Arena - Target Center, built in 1990, renovated in 2004, seats 17,500 for hockey.
Milwaukee:
Pros - Milwaukee is an okay draw for basketball (82.3%, 21st), and baseball (81%, 9th). It's the 28th largest U.S. city.
Cons - Competition with NCAA football, NFL might sap attendance.
Arena - Bradley Center, built in 1988, seats 17,845 for hockey.
Quebec City:
Pros - It's in Canada. It sold 95% of it's seats from 1990 to 1995 when the Nordiques existed.
Cons - Small Market. Small, old Arena.
Arena - Colisee Pepsi, built in 1949, seats 15,176
Cleveland:
Pros - Draws well for the NBA (97.8%, 12th) and NFL (90.3%, 22nd). The Cavaliers and Browns suck. Could make for a good rivalry with Columbus. Great Arena. Great AHL draw (five figures).
Cons - Pro hockey has not been a success in Ohio. Too close to another NHL team that doesn't draw well. City's economy is not good.
Arena - Quicken Loans Arena, built in 1994, seats 20,056.
Cincinnati:
Pros - Good NFL draw (92.1%, 21st) despite an awful team.
Cons - Small city. History of low attendance with ECHL team. Pro hockey has not been a success in Ohio. Close to another NHL team that doesn't draw well. Inadequate Arena.
Arena - US Bank Arena, built in 1975, seats 14,453
Austin:
Pros - Largest U.S. City (12th) without a pro sports franchise. Within a few hours drive of Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio. Good AHL attendance.
Cons - It's in the South, close to another team with okay, but not great attendance. No NHL-worthy Arena.
Arena - Cedar Park Center, built in 2009, seats 6,863.
Anchorage:
Pros - It's in Alaska! No pro sports teams to compete with.
Cons - Smaller city. Would make for nightmarish travel. No NHL-worthy Arena.
Arena - Sullivan Arena, built in 1983, seats 6,599.
Indianapolis:
Pros - Good draw for football (106.3%, 2nd). Good youth hockey programs.
Cons - Midwestern city. Poor draw for basketball (74.5%, 29th). Mediocre hockey interest. No NHL-worthy Arena.
Arena - Pepsi Coliseum, built in 1939, seats 8,200. Potentially the 18,165 (Basketball) seat Conseco Fieldhouse (1999).
I'm 100% locked into Seattle, especially if they get a decent arena. The rivalry with Vancouver would be excellent and it would temper some of the hellacious Western Travel in allowing for another "western" team to shift into the Eastern Conference.
From there, it's a toss-up between Minneapolis, and Milwaukee for me. I took Minneapolis because I want to see the new franchise and the Wild murder each other six times a year, but Milwaukee probably makes more sense overall. The city is larger, there aren't any other pro hockey teams to contend with, and there are fewer professional teams from other sports to contend with. (Bucks and Brewers vs. Vikings, Twins, and Timberwolves).