Stars and Coyotes officials said El Paso proves that hockey can succeed in so-called non-traditional markets and appeal to fans of color.
El Paso rests on the Rio Grande across from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. The city has 678,815 residents, according to 2020 U.S. Census figures, nearly 82 percent of whom are Hispanic.
"This says that Hispanics in Texas like hockey," Stars president and CEO Brad Alberts said of the Hockeyville title. "As more Hispanics get access to the game, both from kids growing up and playing it in our rinks and having access to starting the game, right on up to adults, and getting them out to games, I think that they are going to find that this is a sport they can feel comfortable watching and playing and enjoying."
Coyotes president and CEO Xavier Gutierrez said the game gives the NHL "a great opportunity to really say that it's a community, in terms of Latinos, that is very much top of mind, that we're looking to embrace, celebrate and connect with.
"It's clearly a fast-growing, ever more important community, both a demographic and economic force in America," Gutierrez said.
Gutierrez became the NHL's first Hispanic president and CEO in June 2020
The festivities begin Thursday, with the Stanley Cup making stops at the Events Center; Fort Bliss, the largest installation in the United States Army Forces Command; and at a community celebration in San Jacinto Plaza that former Coyotes players Shane Doan, Taylor Pyatt and David Scatchard are expected to attend.