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The Met Center was demolished 30 years ago but North Stars home still remembered fondly

‘No Stars: When Minnesota Lost Pro Hockey’. FOX 9 Documentary premieres Thursday



How can Minnesota, the State of Hockey, lose a professional hockey team? This documentary examines all the factors that ultimately led to the North Stars relocating to Texas in 1993.

How to watch 

The documentary “No Stars: When Minnesota Lost Pro Hockey” airs on FOX 9+ at 9:30 p.m. on Nov. 14. You can also watch it live in the player above. 

If you miss it, tune in at 11:30 p.m. on Nov. 15 on FOX 9. 

You can also watch the documentary on demand on FOX LOCAL, FOX9.com and on FOX 9’s YouTube channel

What to expect

Chapter 1: The Forgotten Franchise

North Stars fans became hockey orphans when Norm Green moved the team. The success of the Dallas Stars, including the 1999 Stanley Cup, only added to their pain.

Chapter 2: State of Hockey

How can a professional hockey team fail in the State of Hockey? The North Stars struggled financially for decades. The team almost folded, merged with another failing franchise, and then was split in two before ultimately relocating in 1993. 

Chapter 3: Norm Green

Before “Norm Green Sucks” chants, fans praised the North Stars owner after he took control in 1990. 

Chapter 4: The Met

Fans loved the small stadium in Bloomington because of the quirky colored seats and great sight lines. Players loved the Met Center because it was one of the loudest stadiums in the NHL and the ice was “the best.” But it lacked suites needed for modern day franchises and Norm Green wanted public money to update the aging stadium.

Chapter 5: Shifting Stars

Was Norm Green already planning on relocating the franchise when he changed the North Stars logo heading into the 1991-1992 season?

Chapter 6: Better Off?

After the North Stars left, the City of St. Paul lobbied the NHL to bring an expansion team back to Minnesota but needed to build a new stadium first. The XCEL Energy Center in downtown St. Paul has been home to the Minnesota Wild for nearly 25 years. There are now plans to renovate the stadium that again involve public funding.



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