Arizona Coyotes Moyes was a minority partner in Steve Ellman's ownership group, which bought the Coyotes from Richard Burke in 2001. On September 26, 2006, Ellman sold controlling interest in the Coyotes,
Arizona Sting, and its lease of
Jobing.com Arena to Moyes, who retained
Wayne Gretzky as part-owner and head of hockey operations. In addition to his involvement with the Coyotes, Moyes, along with a group of investors, purchased the Arizona-based
World Gym franchise and rebranded it as Coyotes Athletic Centers appointing Arizona native and businessman Darrin Austin as its CEO. Court filings showed Moyes was never keen to own the Coyotes and had no interest in hockey. He acquired control of the club in 2006 after a falling out over a real estate development with former business partner Steve Ellman. Afterwards, Moyes tried to find a buyer for the Coyotes, and he chafed at the league's interference in his attempts. In 2008, Moyes told
Gary Bettman and other league officials that he would stop funding the club. The league agreed to provide emergency funding in return for Moyes ceding his voting control. The acrimony was made public in May 2009 when Bettman and Daly came close to selling the Coyotes to
Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the
Chicago Bulls and
Chicago White Sox, a move that would have seen Moyes receive almost nothing from the sale. On May 5, 2009, Moyes put the Coyotes into
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and announced a plan to sell the club to
Jim Balsillie. Moyes also filed a lawsuit against the NHL, alleging the league was an "illegal cartel." Bettman was furious, arguing the league had been blindsided and that Moyes had no authority to put the club into bankruptcy protection. Moyes was saddled with massive financial losses dating to the time the former
Winnipeg Jets moved to Phoenix. Unable to turn around the team's fiscal picture, he agreed in principle to sell the Coyotes to a group headed by
Research in Motion co-CEO
Jim Balsillie, who intended to move the team to
Hamilton, Ontario. The league responded by stripping Moyes of virtually all of his ownership authority, though he was still nominally the team's owner. The NHL argued that Moyes had no right to bankruptcy because numerous agreements he'd signed with the league in return for financial assistance specifically barred him from filing for bankruptcy. It also claimed that Moyes effectively surrendered control of the team by signing the agreements. Bankruptcy judge Redfield Baum scheduled a hearing for May 19, 2009, to determine who actually controlled the team. In October 2009, Baum rejected the NHL's bid, as well as Balsillie's $242.5-million offer. The judge ruled that Balsillie's bid faced too many legal obstacles, however, he said the NHL could revise its bid to include concessions to Moyes and Gretzky. The NHL had previously taken the position that neither Moyes nor Gretzky were legitimate creditors because they were owners. Under Chapter 11 proceedings, owners usually rank below other creditors and rarely receive any of the proceeds from asset sales. On November 2, 2009, Moyes sold the Coyotes to the NHL for $140 million.
Arizona Sting Through Steve Ellman's investment firm, where Moyes was a business partner, Moyes was majority owner of the
Arizona Sting of the
National Lacrosse League. Moyes received full ownership in the 2006 deal that left
Glendale Arena and its properties to him and looked to sell them the following year. He was unsuccessful in the sale of the team; the league would collapse in 2008.
Arizona Diamondbacks In the mid-1990s, when
Joe Garagiola Sr. was spearheading a group seeking an expansion franchise for Phoenix, Moyes put up $5 million to become a charter investor. He is a minority owner of the
Diamondbacks, owning one-twenty-fourth of the team. Moyes said that this plan meant that residents wouldn't have to "pay a dime." Ultimately, the city of
Glendale chose to build the stadium through public funding. ==Political activity==