The Arizona Coyotes will likely be sold to Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith shortly after the team’s final game and will include a provision guaranteeing current owner Alex Meruelo an expansion team if a new arena is built within five years, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press on Saturday.

The $1 billion sale is expected to happen between the Coyotes’ final game of the 2023-24 season on Wednesday and the start of the playoffs on Saturday, barring unforeseen circumstances, the person said on condition of anonymity because the planned deal has not been announced.

The deal will transfer the franchise’s hockey operations first to the NHL and then to Smith, who plans to move the team to Salt Lake City, and Meruelo will maintain business operations to move forward with a planned $3 billion project that will include a new arena in north Phoenix. Meruelo also will continue to own the Tucson Roadrunners, the franchise’s AHL affiliate, and plans to move the team to Mullett Arena in Tempe, the current temporary home of the Coyotes.

Once an arena is built, Meruelo will pay back by the $1 billion and move forward with the expansion franchise.

Meruelo and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman are expected to announce the deal at a joint news conference next week once the deal is completed. Coyotes general manager Bill Armstrong traveled to Edmonton on Friday night to inform players and coaches of the team’s plans after news of the potential relocation to Salt Lake City were leaked.

“We are focused on a myriad of issues that are unresolved and therefore we are unable to make any official comments at this time,” Meruelo said in a statement released on Saturday. “However, you have my commitment that I am going to speak on all of these issues and publicly address all of your concerns as promptly as possible.”

The NHL had supported the Coyotes’ plan to buy a tract of land at auction to build a new arena, but was hesitant to have the team continue playing at 5,000-seat Mullett Arena, which they share with Arizona State University’s hockey team. The Coyotes had hoped to close a deal on the land valued at $68 million by the end of last year before delays pushed the auction until June.

Meruelo has been adamant about not wanting to sell the team and rebuffed numerous offers through the years, but is going through with the deal because he felt it was unfair to the players to continue playing in an arena that’s not up to NHL standards, the person said. The uncertainty of the land auction meant the Coyotes couldn’t guarantee a new arena was built, which, given the franchise’s past struggles finding a permanent home, led the NHL to push Meruelo to seek other options.

Meruelo wanted to keep the Roadrunners and move them to Tempe to keep as much of his business operations in tact as the group works with Phoenix city officials to build the new arena, along with continuing the franchise’s youth hockey programs in the state, the person said.

Sergachev battles back

Tampa Bay’s Mikhail Sergachev still can’t watch the video of the play that ended his regular season two months ago at Madison Square Garden.

It’s still too soon, and it brings up too many bad memories. The surgery scars on his left leg, above his knee, along the upper side of his inner calf and across the front of his ankle, already offer a daily reminder every time he puts on his gear.

The Lightning defenseman has learned that his journey back to the ice is best served focusing on looking forward, not back.

It has been nine weeks since Sergachev’s leg crumpled underneath the weight of his own body while battling for a puck in the Lightning’s first game after the All-Star break Feb. 7 against the Rangers; he broke both the fibula and tibia.

Sergachev returned to Lightning practice for the first time Monday, wearing a red no-contact jersey. He has been skating for nearly four weeks and is far from fully recovered -- there’s still no definitive timetable on a potential postseason return -- but he has learned a lot about himself coming back from the first major injury of his career.

“It’s just all about the mental side of things,” Sergachev said. “The leg is (fine). There’s a metal rod in there, so it’s not going anywhere. So that’s the main issue, the head. ... It’s just gaining confidence. What looks like normal things for everybody else, for me, it was kind of like Mount Everest it felt like.”