The Arizona Coyotes will still be playing in a neighborhood arena next season, at Mullet Arena. Playing at such a ridiculous temporary venue for one season is already a shame, so you can imagine that having to go back there is not the envy of the players. With that in mind, the father of All-Star Clayton Keller posted on his Twitter account that his son would no longer be playing for the Coyotes, and many players will follow suit as well. This statement caused a lot of reactions on social networks, so it was deleted shortly after. The journalist Craig Morgan spoke with Bryan Keller and let's just say that his explanations cover him even more with ridicule: <q>Wednesday morning while out of town on business, I was informed by several friends that a few Twitter messages had apparently been sent from my personal account regarding the proposed arena vote in Tempe and my son, Clayton Keller's future in AZ. I am writing to inform anyone reading these messages that my Twitter account was hacked and the messages were sent by the hacker. I want to make it clear that I did not authorize these messages and they do not reflect my personal views or opinions. This matter has been reported and my account is now secure.</q> If we understand correctly, his Twitter account would have been hacked and the hacker would have deleted the publication himself, since Bryan was only made aware of it the next morning. It doesn't make any sense and Greg Wyshynski didn't shy away from saying how he thinks. <q>So when most people get hacked, it's someone trying to scam people by selling laptops via DMs or tweeting insults. Except for this one time, where the hacker made it look like an NHL player's father was demanding a trade after a failed vote. You know, like hackers always do (sarcasm)</q> <blockquote class=twitter-tweet><p lang=en dir=ltr>I am writing to inform anyone who reads those messages that my Twitter account was hacked and the messages were sent out by the hacker. I want to make it clear that I did not authorize these messages and they do not reflect my personal views or opinions. (continued below)- Craig Morgan (@CraigSMorgan) <a href=https://twitter.com/CraigSMorgan/status/1659552871896211456?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>May 19, 2023</a></blockquote> <script async src=https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js charset=utf-8> This situation clearly has not ended up being the talk of the town.