The Knights saga, as befitting their tumultuous 1995-96 season, came to an
abrupt and angry end.
The Olympics were coming to Atlanta for the Summer of 1996, and the city was
abuzz with new plans for new arenas, new sporting palaces, and for once, there
was money to fund all these grand schemes. And the Knights made no secret of
it: They wanted a piece of the pie.
Forces bigger than the Knights, though, had taken note of the hockey renaissance
the IHL team had fostered in Atlanta, and with the NHL set to expand itself to
30 teams over five years, it seemed only natural that in the time it would take
to build a new hockey arena, a new NHL franchise would rise in Atlanta to fill
it.
To make way for the new arena, the Omni would be razed. That left the Knights in
a precarious position, and team management delivered an ultimatum to the office
of then-Mayor Bill Campbell: Give us a voice in the new arena plans, or the
Knights would bolt.
The city did not act on the Knights ultimatum, although Campbell's office
professed to be stunned. More cynical observers would have said that the
Knights management simply wanted to be able to go ahead with life after the
Omni wherever it would take them, and Campbell wanted them out of the way
quietly to appease the eventual owners of the new NHL franchise.
The
Knights franchise relocated to Quebec City, a town the NHL Nordiques had
recently jilted on their way to becoming the Colorado Avalanche. The franchise
played on for two unremarkable years as the Quebec Rafales to indifferent crowds.
A number of Knights players remained with the Rafales, but most scattered to other
teams, other leagues, or to Europe. Concurrently, the Nashville Knights relocated to
Pensacola and rechristened themselves the Pensacola Ice Pilots. Both teams
changed uniforms and color schemes, leaving no visible trace of the Atlanta
Knights logo, mascot, or motif behind. The Rafales succumbed after the 1997-98
season; the Ice Pilots are still active in the ECHL. The one recognizable survivor
was Sir Hat Trick, who was reassigned to the ECHL Birmingham Bulls (also owned by the Knights
Berkman/Felix group).
Atlanta labored on for three years without a professional hockey team. Atlanta
fans had to make a four-hour drive to see the ECHL's Augusta Lynx or Birmingham
Bulls, or a ninety-minute drive for the CHL's Macon Whoopee. The puck would not
drop in Atlanta again until 1998 when the new Atlanta Thrashers took the ice.
The Thrashers have yet to acknowledge the Knights franchise, or even any of the
contributions the Knights made to hockey in Atlanta. The exception is a single
goal frame the Knights used at the Omni, which hangs in the Philips Arena gift
shop. No former Knight has appeared on the Thrashers' roster. The only
recognizable member of the Knights organization active with the Thrashers is
radio-TV play-by-play broadcaster Dan Kamal, who became the Thrashers radio
play-by-play announcer in the middle of the 1999-2000 season (anyone at
Thrashers HQ care to admit to hiring Scott Ferrall any more?).