Commissioner Bettman said Bruckheimer and Bonderman approached the NHL this week to request permission to file an expansion application for a Seattle team. The Board of Governors approved the request Thursday.
"We now have an interested ownership group, we have a commitment on an arena, and we have a market we now have to explore," Deputy Commissioner Daly said.
Commissioner Bettman, however, said he had no expectation for how long it would take for the Seattle group to submit its application and that even after it does, the League has to go through a long vetting process similar to what it did with Vegas.
Vegas owner Bill Foley was granted permission to conduct a season ticket drive in December 2014, but the League didn't announce it would start taking applications until June 2015. Vegas was granted a team one year later.
"We're a little familiar with the city, but the level of due diligence that we will do is something the expansion process contemplates," Commissioner Bettman said.
Though Seattle has never had an NHL team, the Seattle Metropolitans, who played in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association from 1915-24, won the Stanley Cup in 1917, defeating the Montreal Canadiens 3-1 in a best-of-5 series. Seattle was the first U.S.-based team to win the Cup.
"From everything I know viscerally I think [Seattle] will be a good market," Commissioner Bettman said. "I think the geographic rivalry with [the] Vancouver [Canucks] as potential will be nice. Building up a bigger presence in the Pacific Northwest for the NHL, a place that we know has great hockey interest at a variety of other levels, it's an intriguing possibility. But we've got homework to do."
In addition, Commissioner Bettman also downplayed the possibility of Houston as a viable market for the NHL either through expansion or relocation. He stressed relocation isn't an option for any current team.
"There is nothing going on right now with Houston," the Commissioner said.