For the last four years, Canadians have been hoping to poach the Phoenix Coyotes out of Arizona and move them to Quebec City, Hamilton or some other market north of the border.Now Joonas Donskoi Jersey , the Coyotes' new owners see Canadian snowbirds and tourists as a key to the teams bottom-line succe s in Glendale.Coyotes co-owner and team President and CEO Anthony LeBlanc talked about ideas to boost team attendance during meetings of the Glendale Convention and Visitors Bureau on Tuesday.LeBlanca Canadian busine sman along with team chairman George Gosbeesaid there are as many Joe Pavelski Jersey 500,000 part-time Arizona residents who are from Alberta and British Columbia.He wants them to go to more Coyotes games and not just when their hometown teams are playing. LeBlanc also want to promote more sports tourism to the Valley from Canada and northern U.S. markets. He said the cost of Coyotes tickets is much le s than for games in Canadian cities and the Valley also offers those fans mild winters.They have snow Patrick Marleau Jersey . We dont, LeBlanc said at a Glendale CVB breakfast at the University of Phoenix Stadium.The Florida Panthers hockey team has also tried to bring in sports tourists from New York, Boston, Toronto and Montreal to see games in Miami.The team is exploring ways to make games friendly for Canadian fans. LeBlanc said that could include Tim Hortons coffee and Marc-Edouard Vlasic Jersey donuts at Jobing.com Arena. Hortons is a popular Canadian brand.Gosbee and LeBlanc head the new Coyotes ownership group made up of energy and busine s executives from western Canada and Texas. They bought the team this summer after receiving financial aid from the city of Glendale and financing from the National Hockey League and a private equity firm.The sale kept the Coyotes in Arizona. There have been efforts to move the team to Hamilton, Quebec City and Seattle.LeBlanc hopes to improve the Coyotes attendance which has been near the bottom in the NHL and Mikkel Boedker Jersey said suite sales and rentals are up so far this year.Mike Sunnucks writes about politics, law, airlines, sports busine s and the economy for , a sister publication of Sporting News.