Re: Hockey isn't happening for the Hawkeyes
Hockey isn't as popular of a sport in Iowa as it is in Minnesota but participation rates are similar to what they are in North Dakota. Youth hockey programs exist in the following Iowa cities: Dubuque, Quad Cities, Waterloo, Cedar Falls, Iowa City, Mason City, Ames, Des Moines, Okoboji, Sioux Center, Sioux City, and Council Bluffs (Omaha). High school is not sponsored by the IHSAA but it does exist on the club level and the league (MWHSHL) has been around for over 40 years with high school programs in: Dubuque, Quad Cities, Waterloo, Cedar Rapids, Mason City, Ames, Des Moines (2), Sioux City, and Council Bluffs (Omaha). Sioux Center plays in the South Dakota League and Okoboji will this year as well. In addition both Des Moines and Omaha have Metro High School leagues that operate as a "House" league. Collegiately there are club teams at Iowa, Iowa State, and Dordt College (used to be one at Drake, don't know if it still exists). The most notable hockey in Iowa is played at the USHL level with teams in Dubuque, Waterloo, Cedar Rapids, Des Moines, Sioux City, and Omaha/Council Bluffs. There is also and NA3HL team in Mason City. ECHL team in the Quad Cities Mallards. Finally, the AHL Iowa Wild.
Okay, so that is the run down of hockey in Iowa. Basically there are programs in pretty much every city with a population greater than 25,000 with the exception of Fort Dodge and a majority of these programs have been around for over 40 years. The sport is not something new to Iowa.
My take on Iowa AD Barta's comments is that he said what he said because now is not the time that he wants to stoke the fire for hockey at Iowa. Coralville isn't building that arena with every concept art drawing flying Iowa banners and colors because they think the club team is going to fill 6,000+ seats though. I think the real intent is for Iowa to field a D1 Varsity program at some point here. It's just that now is not the right time for the AD to roll that news out. Iowa just built a new football facility and there are plans in the works for an endzone renovation at Kinnick Stadium. That project is going to take priority first. Announcing a fundraiser for a stadium project and also announcing a fundraiser for Iowa hockey at the same time is going to hurt the fundraising for the hockey side of things, or maybe both projects. These things are done in stages. Operationally, the Iowa athletic department just hit a windfall with the new Big Ten TV contracts that will bump the payout up from $30 million to $50 million. That's a lot of money to spread around. Financially, Iowa should be able to afford hockey having one of the 15 highest revenue producing athletic departments in the country.
TL;DR - Condensed version: the State of Iowa has a long history in hockey. A hockey arena is being built in town. The Big Ten needs teams. Iowa has money. I attribute AD's comments to timing, expect Iowa to have D1 hockey someday.