People have been mentioning it for years. Will it happen now?
With Nassau Coliseum in desperate need of a makeover and the idea of the Lighthouse Project looking grimmer by the day, the idea of moving the Islanders to Queens, smack dab in the middle of Flushing, a hop skip and jump from the National Tennis Center and Citi-Field ,is an amazing one. Luckily, the Daily News got the scoop the other day, which discusses how badly the people in the borough want this to happen.
For fans, it would give them an opportunity to surround themselves with the sports and players that they love and for Queens, it could mean big business. Anyone who has ever ventured outside the parking lots at the old Shea Stadium knows the neighborhood isn’t fantastic, as it’s surrounded by Chop Shops and shanty like housing, but getting the Islanders there to compliment the other two venues could make local business set up shop.
Lets be fair here, the Islanders aren’t the huge ticket they used to be. However, if there is a professional hockey team in Queens, businesses in the area will no longer be seasonal and will be able to grow all year round. That idea alone should have the Queens chamber of commerce drooling.
According to the article, City Councilman John Liu (D-Flushing), who is also a candidate for city controller, also seems to be extremely dedicated in keeping the four-time Stanley Cup champs from heading to Kansas City or Saskatoon, Canada, the two locations looking to steal the Islanders away.
“The city should do everything humanly possible to keep the Islanders in our region- and preferably in Queens,” Liu said.
Wow. If the Islanders had someone like this taking care of business in Long Island, maybe the Lighthouse Project would be off the ground already. If that wasn’t enough, there are more people that want to get this thing off the ground.
According to the piece:
Chuck Apelian, who heads the Willets Point subcommittee for Community Board 7, envisioned a mighty sports complex anchored by the Mets, the National Tennis Center and the Islanders.
“It’s a great opportunity for Queens,” he said. “It fills out the area – you have baseball, you have tennis, you have hockey.”
I think this plan could work. As a matter of fact, it even make sense. These teams practically have the same father as well, in Bill Shea and share the same team colors. Bringing them together could also give the Isles and their young team a chance to shine in a bigger venue where they will have even more fan support.
It will also make it that much easier for this Brooklynite to get to games.
Let’s do it.
Posted under 2008-2009, Isles Thoughts 2009
This post was written by Patrick Hickey, Jr. on March 27, 2009

Who would have thought that after Bill Guerin boogied on down to Pittsburgh a few weeks ago that Doug Weight would want to be a part of the Islanders’ future?
Despite being in the cellar for most of the season and there being more talk about John Tavares than their improved play, the New York Islanders are focused on ending the season on the right foot and making sure they’re a better team next season.
Despite the Islanders record this season, they’ve had a few players that have never given up this season. Guys that regardless of the score, have fought hard in corners, taken quality shots on net and taken the body.
Despite the fact that Trent Hunter is the longest tenured member on the roster aside from Rick DiPietro and Radek Martinek and would make a more than solid NHL captain and Brendan Witt has the leadership ability, I’m beginning to feel that Mark Streit should be the Islanders next captain.
Well, according to ESPN and Newsday, John Tavares will play for the New York Islanders if they select him first overall.
I will be appearing on WKRB 90.3 FM this Thursday at 6:30 to discuss the Brooklyn Aces on the new talk show “Hockey Night in Brooklyn, with Jonathan Rios.”
Just to see a group of young kids like this, mixed with a few misfit veterans hold the ice with the best team in hockey yesterday meant a lot to determining what this team is going to be capable of in the future.
I’ve told you guys countless times in the three seasons that I’ve been writing this column that the New York Islanders are unlike any team in the NHL.
Kind of funny that a guy that most Islander fans despise, the one and only, the incomparable, the magically delicious Wayne Gretzky, actually digs what the Islanders are doing with the youth movement.