The Tucson Roadrunners are rolling out the red carpet to kick off the 2017-18 season.
Yes, a real red carpet.
The American Hockey League affiliate of the Arizona Coyotes wants to begin Year 2 in style.
On Tuesday, the Roadrunners held a âDrop the Puckâ luncheon at Tucson Arena, where season-ticket holders and corporate partners nibbled on steak and crème-brulle as they chatted with members of the team.
The Roadrunners open their regular season Saturday with a 7:05 p.m. home game against the San Diego Gulls.
âWeâre excited to get back out onto the ice and show the fans what we can bring to the city of Tucson,â team Bob Hoffman said. âSome excitement, some thrills, and hopefully weâll have a championship one day.â
The Roadrunners plan to make Saturday hockey day in Tucson, with pre-game festivities and a tailgate featuring the local band Sqwrl. The team will arrive about three hours before the game in classic cars, and then make a walk down the red carpet into the arena.
Fans who followed the Roadrunners last season can expect to see a few familiar faces mixed in with some new talent.
The new faces begin with Mike Van Ryn, who takes over as head coach after spending last season as the Coyotesâ developmental coach. The 38-year-old said Tuesday that Tucson ârocks.â
âI hate to sound like a broken record,â he said, âbut we talk about how great the crowd is and how electric that building was.â
The 38-year-old Van Ryn inherits a young roster that is expected to feed into the Coyotes pretty quickly.
Last season, the Roadrunners sent a dozen players to the NHL, among the highest number of any team in their league.
Kyle Wood headlines the Roadrunnersâ roster. He starred with the team last season before seeing a bit of playing time with the Coyotes towards the end of the year.
For Wood, the return to Tucson is bittersweet.
âIt was obviously a little disappointing getting cut by the Coyotes, but itâs awesome coming back here,â Wood said. âI played here last year and the fans are great.â
Wood, who expects to play a top role for the Roadrunners again this year, said that he needs to improve both on his decisions with the puck and his skating.
Wood isnât the only Roadrunner with previous NHL experience.
Andrew Campbell, a hockey journeyman who has seen limited NHL action with the Kings, Maple Leafs and Coyotes, will open the season in Tucson.
The 29-year-old defenseman will serve as a veteran on a roster mostly made of players in their early-20s.
âFrom everything Iâve heard, (Tucson) is a fantastic place to play,â Campbell said. âMy family and I were looking for a chance, and this is such an enticing place between the weather, the fan support and the way the team is trending up and up every year.â
âIt was too good for me to pass up.â



