Greg Jones moved to Utah in 1995, just in time to witness the Utah Grizzlies’ first season in their new home. They won the Turner Cup that season, and it’s still the only championship Jones has been able to witness.

Three decades later, he and thousands of others with similar stories bid the Grizzlies farewell.

The team played its final game on Sunday, losing 5-4 in overtime to the Rapid City Rush after completing a three-goal comeback with 1:21 left in the third period.

They’ll suit up next season in Trenton, New Jersey as the Trenton Ironhawks.

While the easy assumption is that the NHL ran the ECHL out of town, it’s not true. Selling the team became necessary after the passing of both owner David Elmore and CEO Kevin Bruder.

Besides, ECHL games are meant for a separate demographic than NHL games.

Jones, for example, is now in a position where he can afford Utah Mammoth season tickets, but he thinks back to a time when he was putting two kids through travel hockey.

Cheap Grizzlies tickets would have been the only option, even if an NHL team had been in Utah back then.

Grizzlies head coach John Becanic noted the same thing.

“There’s not a lot of corporate people (at Grizzlies games),” he said. “These are people that sometimes spend their last dime of their paycheck to come to a Grizzlies game.

“That’s tough for those people because it was an affordable, entertaining brand of hockey, and that’s leaving the Salt Lake City area, and that I feel bad for.”

For now, fans can take advantage of the limited-view tickets at the Delta Center for Mammoth games, many of which are sold for $15 through the Smith’s grocery store ticket program.

But once the renovations are completed, those will be gone, too. That’s where other levels of hockey will be able to step up.

The NCDC, a Tier II junior team, has the Utah Outliers and the Ogden Mustangs; A number of colleges in the state have ACHA hockey programs; The USPHL Premier division has the Vernal Oilers and the GMHL has the St. George Ravens.

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Becanic’s previous coaching job was with the NCDC’s Idaho Falls Spud Kings, where the local community has latched onto the team and made it one of the best places to catch a hockey game outside the NHL.

It’s not classified as professional hockey, but the fans don’t care — they make it great anyway.

Nothing will remove the sting of losing a team that spent 30 years in the area or the traditions and memories that come with it, but if you’re looking to get your hockey fix without breaking the bank, consider hitching your wagon to one of these other hockey programs and creating those traditions and memories all over again.

The fans are what make the games special.

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