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To Shed Some Light on the whole New Stadium thing ...


Ronin

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Here's an excellent piece about new sports stadiums, particularly NFL stadiums.

 

http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/money/economy/story/2012-02-04/cnbc-super-bowl-suites/52948968/1

 

Some key excerpts:

 

"Luxury suites have been growing in importance since the 1990s and are an essential part of any new stadium being built," says Emily Sparvero, assistant professor at the Sports Industry Research Center at Temple University.

 

"In fact, most new stadiums are built not because they are physically obsolete, but they are financially obsolete," adds Sparvero.

In the past 20 years, 75% of American sports teams have either built or remodeled their venues, with luxury suite additions being a major reason for the construction and renovation.

 

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Whether it's the NBA, NHL or Major League Baseball, suites now account for anywhere between 5% and 20% of total team revenue, according to the latest statistics. What started out as a status symbol has evolved into a necessity.

 

"With greater payroll expenses from player free agency, owners have to find ways to raise more revenue," says Mark Conrad, an associate professor at Fordham University's school of business. "Luxury boxes provide a constant flow, no matter how good or bad the team is playing. The payment is already made and it's part of the revenue generated by the facility."

 

The money can be huge. While the number of suites varies — the new Yankee Stadium has 68 while Dallas Cowboys Stadium has 300 — any given suite can sell from $224,000 to more than $900,000 per year.

 

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As for who's buying the suites, it's a matter of money, as well.

 

"Corporations and high net-worth individuals are purchasing suites," says Chad Estis, president of Legends, the premium ticket sales company that handles teams such as the Cowboys and Yankees.

 

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"The danger in chasing corporate dollars is that they tend to evaporate during down financial times," DeGaris argues.

 

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These are not factors that favor the team staying in Buffalo.

 

There is a little bit of hope at the bottom of the piece, but still, these things are relative. i.e., what can an owner get in another location that he can't get "here." Buffalo doesn't rank well in that regard and of the criteria listed above, Buffalo by nature is in "down economic times" due to its geographical circumstances.

 

I just threw this out there because some keep mentioning individual ticket sales, which really don't matter in the grand scheme of things nearly as much.

 

Also, ...

 

"Fan loyalty is always based on team performance rather than a sense of being disadvantaged because of luxury suites," Ordine says.

 

If the team's performance doesn't improve, we already know that tix sales suffer.

 

fwiw

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I don't see corporate sales as a huge barrier to the team being here...there are a large number of companies that would want in...and I believe a lot of the Toronto series was geared toward getting Canadian corporate dollars in addition to catering to the Southern Ontario fan base.

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Here's another good piece encompassing more on the topic from around the same time:

 

Why the NFL Stadium Experience Is Dying

 

 

 

While the NFL stadium experience is evolving under the guise of getting bigger and better, the average fan is getting priced out of the equation entirely.

The once pleasantly rowdy atmosphere that defined stadium life has been overrun with a more refined and indifferent corporate culture. Further, alternatives to the stadium experience have grown more enticing.

Here are four reasons the game-day experience has changed.

 

The Rise of Luxury Suites

Though stadium suites were initially invented to make the nosebleed section more attractive, luxury boxes are now one of the driving sources of revenue for NFL teams.

CNBC.com notes that annual suite prices can stretch anywhere from $80,000 per box (the lowest price you'll pay at Indianapolis' Lucas Oil Stadium) to more than $900,000.

You don't even need to do the math to understand that in many cases, suite owners are paying multiple times the price of a regular ticket for each seat in their luxury box.

It's unsurprising then that luxury suites are taking over.

According to the executive director of the Association of Luxury Suite Directors per The Business of Sports by Brad R. Humphreys and Dennis R. Howard, "'Ten years ago, only about 3% of the seating in stadiums and arenas was designated as premium and club seating. Now that figure is approaching 20%.'”

Corporations are a major consumer of luxury seating, using sports events as opportunities to impress potential clients and close business deals.

But though corporations are more loyal with their wallets, they lack devotion with their hearts—and it's taking a toll on the NFL stadium experience.

Game day is becoming more stuffy and corporate with the focus shifting from football.

The NFL is about top-shelf liquor and market banter to CEOs who spend Sundays sheltered in their boxes where only a compelling third-and-inches-on-the-goal-line scenario may avert attention away from Blackberry screens.

 

The Personal Seat License

Personal seat licenses (PSLs) have created another hurdle of affordability that's pricing the average football fan out of the stands.

A PSL essentially guarantees the rights to a particular seat in a stadium, and owning one is a prerequisite for buying season tickets at almost half of NFL stadiums.

Personal seat licenses were invented so that teams could quickly generate capital for projects like building new stadiums.

As you can imagine, PSLs are expensive.

The Sports Business Daily reports that the right to buy season tickets at Cowboys Stadium could set you back $150,000, and prices are not relenting.

At Heinz Field, the cost of seat licenses has increased, on average, by 736.35 percent from the stadium's inaugural football game in 2001 through November 2011.

So while average NFL fans struggle to navigate a sputtering economy, the economic elite are driving the cost of watching live football higher than the nosebleed section.

 

Gimmicks

Teams have also started packing their stadiums with revenue-generating gimmicks that detract from the traditional game-day experience.

Buff guys slinging Bud Light are rivaled by sleek bars reminiscent of upscale Manhattan nightclubs.

Chicken-fingers-and-fries stands are now matched with full-blown restaurants.

These features allow stadiums to mark up concession prices higher than their already astronomical rates, burning a deeper hole in fan wallets.

 

HDTV

High-definition television emerged almost in tandem with skyrocketing ticket prices, and it has provided an affordable alternative to live football.

To some, the living room viewing experience is superior to the stadium.

HD provides a crystal-clear picture of the action, and DVR allows control over instant replay.

In contrast, the stadium experience often involves squinting down at the field from cloud level and repeating, "Wait, what just happened?"

Further, stadium traffic is a nightmare and fans can easily spend more time in the parking lot than they spend in the actual stadium (tailgates excluded, of course).

With technology facilitating a comprehensive home-viewing experience, stadium-going is simply becoming less enticing by comparison.

 

I don't see corporate sales as a huge barrier to the team being here...there are a large number of companies that would want in...and I believe a lot of the Toronto series was geared toward getting Canadian corporate dollars in addition to catering to the Southern Ontario fan base.

 

Sounds like more of an opinion rather than fact, the facts of which speak otherwise. Did you even bother to read the piece? How could you have so quickly?

 

This is a fact of modern era pro sports. The NHL and NBA have largely been ruined by it all, the NFL is not far behind. MLB I would argue too, but there are so many games that the prices aren't as high.

 

I much prefer the "old way," like many here do, but unfortunately that's not how it works.

 

I'd be fine with an "old time" traditional stadium and just having a team here. Granted, it'd be nice if the people running the team knew what they were doing.

Edited by TaskersGhost
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I don't see corporate sales as a huge barrier to the team being here...there are a large number of companies that would want in...and I believe a lot of the Toronto series was geared toward getting Canadian corporate dollars in addition to catering to the Southern Ontario fan base.

 

It's worth noting that Canada, unlike the USA, does not allow tax deductions for luxury suites. So any rich Canadian or Canadian corporation buying a suite, in Buffalo or Toronto, is footing the entire bill. In the USA companies write off such purchases, so in effect we subsidize millionaire playpens.

Edited by PromoTheRobot
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It's worth noting that Canada, unlike the USA, does not allow tax deductions for luxury suites. So any rich Canadian or Canadian corporation buying a suite, in Buffalo or Toronto, is footing the entire bill. In the USA companies write off such purchases, so in effect we subsidize millionaire playpens.

That subsidy business can't be right because I keep hearing from Republicans that we have a socialist government that over burdens the Job Creating entrepreneurs with onerous taxes.
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At some point the bubble of courting "luxury" dollars in the sports world and the real estate world is going to collapse. I don't know how anyone thinks it's a sustainable model. But we're here and we're along for the ride.

 

The one thing I imagine we can be sure of is that taxpayers will be left holding the bag when the market corrects itself.

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That subsidy business can't be right because I keep hearing from Republicans that we have a socialist government that over burdens the Job Creating entrepreneurs with onerous taxes.

Is it possible that we have subsidies and onerous taxes at the same time? If so, might that have something to do with our two-party system where both parties take turns being in power?

 

 

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I don't see corporate sales as a huge barrier to the team being here...there are a large number of companies that would want in...and I believe a lot of the Toronto series was geared toward getting Canadian corporate dollars in addition to catering to the Southern Ontario fan base.

 

How successful was that after 5-6 years?

 

And where are these corporations now who could be purchasing more expensive future luxury boxes? Are they all waiting for a new stadium to jump in?

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Sounds like more of an opinion rather than fact, the facts of which speak otherwise. Did you even bother to read the piece? How could you have so quickly?

 

.

 

Most of that article is more opinion than fact. True luxury box seats are up to 20%. That means the overwhelming majority of seats are not, so it's hard to see how "corporate" these games have become based on that stat alone. Exactly how does this guy quantify "stuffy" and "corporate" and lack of "heart"?

 

Also, PSL's are fan investments that are free to be sold by fans for profit. Nothing wrong with that. Plus, the secondary market (where many season ticket/PSL holders pedal their seats) makes tickets very easily available in every NFL town for every game--sometimes for less than face value.

 

All this histrionic moaning about "corporate" ruination of NFL games is bogus. As the article has pointed out, the NFL has made it much more atractive to sit at home and live it up all day Sunday (and Thursday night).

Edited by Mr. WEO
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Sounds like more of an opinion rather than fact, the facts of which speak otherwise. Did you even bother to read the piece? How could you have so quickly?

 

This is a fact of modern era pro sports. The NHL and NBA have largely been ruined by it all, the NFL is not far behind. MLB I would argue too, but there are so many games that the prices aren't as high.

 

I much prefer the "old way," like many here do, but unfortunately that's not how it works.

 

I'd be fine with an "old time" traditional stadium and just having a team here. Granted, it'd be nice if the people running the team knew what they were doing.

 

The article says nothing of the viability of a team in Buffalo, nor does it speak to any issue remotely related to corporate money in the area, so I'm not sure why you'd claim that "the facts speak otherwise" in response to my statement.

 

Also, the article doesn't touch on PSLs, which can easily contribute a great deal of money to a new stadium.

 

How successful was that after 5-6 years?

 

And where are these corporations now who could be purchasing more expensive future luxury boxes? Are they all waiting for a new stadium to jump in?

 

Since I'm not aware of a list of who's currently purchasing suites at the Ralph, I can't say.

 

As for companies in the area with money, is it your opinion that they won't spend it at the stadium, or that there simply aren't any here?

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The article says nothing of the viability of a team in Buffalo, nor does it speak to any issue remotely related to corporate money in the area, so I'm not sure why you'd claim that "the facts speak otherwise" in response to my statement.

 

Also, the article doesn't touch on PSLs, which can easily contribute a great deal of money to a new stadium.

 

 

 

Since I'm not aware of a list of who's currently purchasing suites at the Ralph, I can't say.

 

As for companies in the area with money, is it your opinion that they won't spend it at the stadium, or that there simply aren't any here?

 

It's my impression that the luxury suites at the Ralph are hard to fully sell. It's likely because there is not a density of corporations who would pay for this luxury in Buffalo (and they haven't come over from Canada, despite all of the "regionalization"). So the answer to your question is "both".

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It's my impression that the luxury suites at the Ralph are hard to fully sell. It's likely because there is not a density of corporations who would pay for this luxury in Buffalo (and they haven't come over from Canada, despite all of the "regionalization"). So the answer to your question is "both".

I think that you're right, here. But I'm also going to guess that going forward it is only going to get harder to sell them, period.

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It's my impression that the luxury suites at the Ralph are hard to fully sell. It's likely because there is not a density of corporations who would pay for this luxury in Buffalo (and they haven't come over from Canada, despite all of the "regionalization"). So the answer to your question is "both".

 

Obviously it's difficult to project what may or may not be do-able luxury-box-wise with a new stadium...my guess (and that's all i can offer at this point) is that (a) they would be able to sell more with a newer venue, and (b) the difficulty in selling them could/would be mitigated partially with PSLs.

 

Don't know either for a fact though.

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Is it possible that we have subsidies and onerous taxes at the same time? If so, might that have something to do with our two-party system where both parties take turns being in power?

No. Or at least not for the priviliged few. Like these oppressed and downtrodden folks: http://www.salon.com/2014/05/30/10_disgustingly_rich_companies_that_will_do_anything_to_avoid_paying_taxes_partner/?source=newsletter
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It's worth noting that Canada, unlike the USA, does not allow tax deductions for luxury suites. So any rich Canadian or Canadian corporation buying a suite, in Buffalo or Toronto, is footing the entire bill. In the USA companies write off such purchases, so in effect we subsidize millionaire playpens.

 

B-b-b-because....FREEDOM!!

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These kind of things make me chuckle. We have been so sheltered from this dynamic for at least a decade and potentially longer. The Bills have been gearing for this for 17 years (or whenever they moved camp to Rochester). We are just recently being exposed to this "new sports environment" but the reality is in the majority of the sports world this is the norm. Just accept the changing landscape because it is never reverting back. There is just too much money to be made. There is not a meeting in pro sports where they are discussing what the fans would like unless it is tied to the almighty dollar. When those conversations do take place it is with the not so hidden agenda of growing and retaining revenue. "If we add X, the short and long term financials impacts are Y &Z." These are staffs of highly educated business professionals that get paid very well to grow and retain revenue. Fortunately for us the Bills are really good at this.

 

Enjoy the new world. Enjoy the high end ammenities but do so without sacrificing the soul of our identity.

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Here's my question. The company/firm/whatever that has been pitching stadium idea's has their priorities set.

 

#1. The stadium has to accommodate and/or be super bowl ready.

 

With that being said, why??? Buffalo has about the same chance of holding a super bowl as they do a winter Olympics. They don't have the infrastructure,economy, housing, etc. to pull it off. So why try toting a fancy state of the art stadium that is super bowl ready when they will never play there?

 

Why not say, I don't want the souped up version of this and give me something that is new/function/luxury boxes/etc that will make people happy without having to spend a 1.3 billion dollars?

Edited by The Wiz
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Here's my question. The company/firm/whatever that has been pitching stadium idea's has their priorities set.

 

#1. The stadium has to accommodate and/or be super bowl ready.

 

With that being said, why??? Buffalo has about the same chance of holding a super bowl as they do a winter Olympics. They don't have the infrastructure,economy, housing, etc. to pull it off. So why try toting a fancy state of the art stadium that is super bowl ready when they will never play there?

 

Why not say, I don't want the souped up version of this and give me something that is new/function/luxury boxes/etc that will make people happy without having to spend a 1.3 billion dollars?

I don't think that they have to have a Super Bowl ready stadium for all of the reasons that you listed. Buffalo does not have the hotels, cabs, etc...

 

With that being said the main priority will be a revenue generating stadium. The cost of all revenue generating stadiums is in the same range. It does not cost more to make it Super Bowl ready (at least not for a new stadium).

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I don't think that they have to have a Super Bowl ready stadium for all of the reasons that you listed. Buffalo does not have the hotels, cabs, etc...

 

With that being said the main priority will be a revenue generating stadium. The cost of all revenue generating stadiums is in the same range. It does not cost more to make it Super Bowl ready (at least not for a new stadium).

The renovations that were/will be done to Browns stadium were apparently well accepted. We are doing the same thing now but Goodell and other people are saying we need a new stadium to stay in buffalo. Sounds more like the NFL/owners trying to make us spend more to make more since we don't have a voice in the owners office (Ralph).

Edited by The Wiz
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The renovations that were/will be done to Browns stadium were apparently well accepted. We are doing the same thing now but Goodell and other people are saying we need a new stadium to stay in buffalo. Sounds more like the NFL/owners trying to make us spend more to make more since we don't have a voice in the owners office (Ralph).

This new stadium was always coming after this lease. RWS simply cannot generate the revenue needed to compete. The Bills new this and that's why they signed the shorter lease. They will need something at least like what's in Cleveland and all the way up to a Lucas Oil.
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a kknow if I am one of those fancy pants architects I find a way to put in some of fashioned bleacher seats in the stadium to give it a retro feel. I am talking the open air beneath you, wood board and all. Maybe put glass beneath it so you can't fall, but something cool like that to throw back.

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No. Or at least not for the priviliged few. Like these oppressed and downtrodden folks: http://www.salon.com...urce=newsletter

 

Wow, Salon.com... that bastion of non-biased, middle-of-the-road opinion. <_<

 

Maybe Bill should list the actual amount of taxes paid by those companies.

 

Take it to PPP . . .

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It's worth noting that Canada, unlike the USA, does not allow tax deductions for luxury suites. So any rich Canadian or Canadian corporation buying a suite, in Buffalo or Toronto, is footing the entire bill. In the USA companies write off such purchases, so in effect we subsidize millionaire playpens.

 

That is correct, and we also subsidize NFL owners and by default then, the players, many of whom are also millionaires.

 

The system that is the NFL has gotten out of hand, just as it has with all sports.

 

Most of that article is more opinion than fact. True luxury box seats are up to 20%. That means the overwhelming majority of seats are not, so it's hard to see how "corporate" these games have become based on that stat alone. Exactly how does this guy quantify "stuffy" and "corporate" and lack of "heart"?

 

Also, PSL's are fan investments that are free to be sold by fans for profit. Nothing wrong with that. Plus, the secondary market (where many season ticket/PSL holders pedal their seats) makes tickets very easily available in every NFL town for every game--sometimes for less than face value.

 

All this histrionic moaning about "corporate" ruination of NFL games is bogus. As the article has pointed out, the NFL has made it much more atractive to sit at home and live it up all day Sunday (and Thursday night).

 

Nice of you to challenge as an opinion when the guy cites data. Meanwhile, you throw out a "20%" figure but don't explain what it is.

 

If you mean 20% of seating capacity, and you think that this reasoning does not stand, I simply don't know what to say.

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Obviously it's difficult to project what may or may not be do-able luxury-box-wise with a new stadium...my guess (and that's all i can offer at this point) is that (a) they would be able to sell more with a newer venue, and (b) the difficulty in selling them could/would be mitigated partially with PSLs.

 

Don't know either for a fact though.

 

Yes we do know.

 

"We can't afford seat licenses and luxury suites," Erie County executive Mark Poloncarz said in February.

 

That’s the context for Jones’ comments. The modern NFL is a cash cow and some owners may feel that the Buffalo market — home to one of the NFL’s oldest stadiums and one of the league’s least expensive tickets — is holding the league back.

 

http://espn.go.com/blog/buffalo-bills/post/_/id/9827/jerry-jones-signals-mixed-on-bills-future

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Does anyone else feel the momentum shifting away from the idea of "don't worry, there is NO WAY this team leaves here?" lately?

 

Indeed.

 

As I've been saying, once some distance is put between Wilson's passing, we'll start hearing the "other side."

 

Here's the same link as above;

 

http://espn.go.com/b...on-bills-future

 

Jerry Jones says exactly that, he won't discuss it quite yet out of respect.

 

But once enough time has passed, and IMO we're there now, then the gloves will come off. As several other posters have stated or implied, those not blinded by notions that Buffalo's the center of much of anything, it's all about the money and the accommodation to the wealthy.

 

Jones mentions Toronto directly and there is absolutely no question whatsoever that Toronto would do what he says. Frankly, and while I wouldn't, but I think that many Bills fans would still watch the games even if they wouldn't go to them. IMO Jones and other owners know that. Not that it's all that relevant because the WNY TV market really isn't huge by metro standards, but still.

 

As I've also said often, I think that it's foolish to think that they might not move to one of several other cities that presently don't have a team. All of the following are bigger metro areas: Las Vegas, Portland, Oklahoma City, Memphis, Omaha.

 

As well, I also don't see this $400M buyout option as a major hurdle. The owners can easily find a way out of that.

 

I still see the team going to Toronto. There's been way too much hubbub in recent years about the NFL going international, and IMO they'll never have a better opportunity at a "good first step" in that regard. It's not going to be England before Canada, if England ever at all, and in Canada it's not going to be any city but Toronto. I highly doubt that there are ever teams in Toronto and Buffalo simultaneously. Think about that for a second.

 

All I know is that many of the major things we were originally told have been stood on their heads:

 

The sale would take years: now we're talking about having a new owner by October.

 

The Wilson's control the sale: the owners control the sale.

 

The only talk has been about owners desiring to keep the team in Buffalo: Now talk about owners wanting to move the team will begin surfacing.

 

If it benefits the other owners to move the team, $400M isn't going to be a showstopper. Particularly if behind closed doors the new owner has designs on moving, has a closed door meeting with Buffalo/Erie execs, and tells them that he's not going to put much into the team in Buffalo and will suck up his losses, and then move the team in '20, ... OR ..., they can take say $50M as a buyout. I'm sure that giving them one or two a small sum to help the decision-making process isn't out of the question as well.

 

These "legal" things are rarely in stone and hardly ever non-negotiable.

Edited by TaskersGhost
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I've joked with some friends about this before, but the idea seems less and less ridiculous every day. If you wanted to move a team to LA, to hell with building a normal stadium and trying to attract a "fan base" to the local team. .Build a stadium in LA composed of nothing but luxury suites, and make it an event for all of the stars/celebs/businesses out there. You'd make a killing.

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Yes we do know.

 

"We can't afford seat licenses and luxury suites," Erie County executive Mark Poloncarz said in February.

 

That’s the context for Jones’ comments. The modern NFL is a cash cow and some owners may feel that the Buffalo market — home to one of the NFL’s oldest stadiums and one of the league’s least expensive tickets — is holding the league back.

 

http://espn.go.com/blog/buffalo-bills/post/_/id/9827/jerry-jones-signals-mixed-on-bills-future

 

PSLs are absolutely an option--Polancarcz is posturing at best, flat incorrect at worst.

 

I know for a fact I can afford one, and I know that nearly every single season ticket holder I know can afford one as well.

 

As for the $400M buyout you keep insisting is a slam dunk if the NFL wants it, I woul encourage you to read the lease; it's a near impossibility unless the County just says "ah screw it; who wants the NFL anyway?"...which they aren't going to do.

 

I've joked with some friends about this before, but the idea seems less and less ridiculous every day. If you wanted to move a team to LA, to hell with building a normal stadium and trying to attract a "fan base" to the local team. .Build a stadium in LA composed of nothing but luxury suites, and make it an event for all of the stars/celebs/businesses out there. You'd make a killing.

 

Until the team had zero home field advantage because there are nothing but luxury boxes--then it becomes a case of being unable to attract coaches, free agents, etc and having a poor TV market--which is the real money maker.

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I've joked with some friends about this before, but the idea seems less and less ridiculous every day. If you wanted to move a team to LA, to hell with building a normal stadium and trying to attract a "fan base" to the local team. .Build a stadium in LA composed of nothing but luxury suites, and make it an event for all of the stars/celebs/businesses out there. You'd make a killing.

 

But they'd have to actually show up to the games or it would be a joke for the NFL. They'd also have to have "regular seating" just for appearances.

 

I hear ya, but I still discount LA as a landing spot. Toronto seems to be the spot for numerous reasons.

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PSLs are absolutely an option--Polancarcz is posturing at best, flat incorrect at worst.

 

I know for a fact I can afford one, and I know that nearly every single season ticket holder I know can afford one as well.

 

As for the $400M buyout you keep insisting is a slam dunk if the NFL wants it, I woul encourage you to read the lease; it's a near impossibility unless the County just says "ah screw it; who wants the NFL anyway?"...which they aren't going to do.

 

 

 

Until the team had zero home field advantage because there are nothing but luxury boxes--then it becomes a case of being unable to attract coaches, free agents, etc and having a poor TV market--which is the real money maker.

They are coming. No offense to Polancarcz but the Bills have a much better sense for what the market will bare and understand the revenue streams infinitely more than he does. They will not all come from WNY IMO it will be about 1/2. Can WNYers pay $5000 one time for 30,000 seats? Can 15,000 people fork over a 1 time $10,000 payment for 2 seats (that they can resell)?

 

If that is impossible we need to stop talking about what a great fan base we have. We may be passionate but not great.

Edited by Kirby Jackson
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PSLs are absolutely an option--Polancarcz is posturing at best, flat incorrect at worst.

 

I know for a fact I can afford one, and I know that nearly every single season ticket holder I know can afford one as well.

 

As for the $400M buyout you keep insisting is a slam dunk if the NFL wants it, I woul encourage you to read the lease; it's a near impossibility unless the County just says "ah screw it; who wants the NFL anyway?"...which they aren't going to do.

 

 

 

Until the team had zero home field advantage because there are nothing but luxury boxes--then it becomes a case of being unable to attract coaches, free agents, etc and having a poor TV market--which is the real money maker.

 

I think that you're out of touch with the average Bills fan. Also, who's going to buy PSLs for a losing team? I can't even begin to tell you how many of my personal friends have not only quit their seasons, but don't even bother going to games anymore because the team sucks with no end in sight. Until the FO changes it will be same-old same-old just like it has since Wilson's owned the team with one brief pause when Polian was in charge.

 

And I'm talking about fans that used to make some of the biggest tailgating parties during the '90s era Bills, not merely lukewarm fans. You can rant on about them not being real fans all you want, but that's to ignore the point.

 

As to your latter point, I don't think in that case that homefield advantage would be a factor. His point was that in L.A. it's all about the status. The team may suck because the players don't like playing there, which is a different matter.

 

I suspect that if something like that were to happen it would be a lot more luxury suites but still 30-40K standard seating.

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Can WNYers pay $5000 one time for 30,000 seats? Can 15,000 people fork over a 1 time $10,000 payment for 2 seats (that they can resell)?

I think of it in terms of the car sales analogy--it's not the sticker price that matters, it's the monthly payment.

 

If PSL's can be amoritized over 48 months, the buying power equation gets a lot more favorable.

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I think of it in terms of the car sales analogy--it's not the sticker price that matters, it's the monthly payment.

 

If PSL's can be amoritized over 48 months, the buying power equation gets a lot more favorable.

Great point and I think that will be an option.
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