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Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Meanwhile the Revs will probably still be playing in Foxboro because it makes the most sense economically to the Krafts.

Did you mess with the HTML to do that? That's really clever. Also, really true...
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Did you mess with the HTML to do that? That's really clever. Also, really true...

When using the QUOTE BBCode, you can add an = after to identify the author.

Ex. QUOTE=Pundits
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Keep the title Somerville-focused! If this Villen is going to dream about a soccer stadium, might as well dream a pleasant dream.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

^Jeez, I just realized I opened this thread 7 years ago. And I moved out of Somerville almost three years ago. Oh well. At least Somerville got the IKEA.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Didn't mean to attack the messenger. Just that the article is so much fluff. A couple of RI pols called the Revs office and the Revs office were polite and didn't choke laughing. In fact, the Revs may use it as a negotiating tool in their talks with pols from areas where they could actually MAKE MONEY in the long term (i.e. in a state that doesn't have the highest US unemployment rate).

You can come at me all you like, but guess what? They're just as capable of making money in Providence no matter how much you and everyone else want to bitch about how much Rhode Island sucks and how you'd all abandon the team if it moved. When was the last time you saw a game at Gillette, again?

http://variety.com/2014/tv/ratings/usa-germany-rating-lower-for-espn-but-online-viewing-rises-1201252966/ said:
Despite the early start time, West Coast markets continue to be well represented among the top-rated nationally. According to Nielsen, the top 10 metered markets were: New York (9.7), San Diego (8.6), Sacramento (8.3), Seattle/Tacoma (8.1), Orlando (8.1), Baltimore (8.1), Columbus (8.1), West Palm Beach (7.9), Providence (7.6), San Francisco (7.2) and Austin (7.2).

Boston didn't even crack the top ten.

Mind you, they finally managed to pull into the top 10 ahead of Providence for USA-Belgium, only to lose to... wait for it... Hartford.

http://espnmediazone.com/us/press-releases/2014/07/usa-belgium-espns-highest-overnight-rating-for-a-fifa-world-cup-match-ever/ said:
The top-10 metered markets: New York (15.0), Hartford/New Haven (13.2), Washington, D.C., (12.8), Richmond (12.3), Boston (12.2), West Palm Beach (12.0), Baltimore (11.4), Cincinnati (11.4), San Diego (11.0), Columbus (10.8), Norfolk (10.8) and Orlando (10.8)

To date, the highest-rated markets on ESPN, ESPN2 and ABC are: Washington DC (4.5), New York (4.2), San Francisco (3.9), Los Angeles (3.6), San Diego (3.5), Orlando (3.5), Hartford/New Haven (3.5), Miami/Fort Lauderdale (3.4), West Palm Beach (3.4), Richmond (3.3) and Boston (3.3).

Boston is a weak market for soccer, and whereas Providence has a huge amount of growth potential, what you've got in Boston for soccer coverage right now is what you're always going to have and that's not going to change no matter where the stadium ends up being built. In fact, it might actually get better. Look at what happened with LA and the NFL.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Boston is a weak market for soccer, and whereas Providence has a huge amount of growth potential, what you've got in Boston for soccer coverage right now is what you're always going to have and that's not going to change no matter where the stadium ends up being built. In fact, it might actually get better. Look at what happened with LA and the NFL.

I know this is my first post and it's a shame to use it to contradict another poster but your post is way off the mark.
I first moved to Boston in 1998 and it was hard to find a bar in the city showing the US in the world cup. This year you needed to be 2 hours early just to get in to the Banshee, thousands packed city hall plaza, everywhere with a TV showed the games. Thats an enormous difference in soccer interest in 16 years. Most kids under 30 with an interest in sport knows about the EPL and Liverpool will sell out Fenway again this Summer.
For MLS to work in New England, the team needs to be located in the center of the largest urban environment, i.e greater Boston. It might do alright in Providence but it would thrive in Boston. I have so many friends who won't make the trip to Foxboro because they play on a plastic pitch and the stadium sucks the life out of a small crowd. To a man, these lads reckon they would buy a season ticket if they could take the T and grab a few beers before/after.
I would love it if a new stadium was built in Boston, preferably in the inner belt Somerville!
Kraft, however, has no incentive to move the team and will keep fobbing the fans off with BS. It's a shame because he did so much to start the league and now the Revs risk getting left far far behind.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

I know this is my first post and it's a shame to use it to contradict another poster but your post is way off the mark.

Welcome! You've got nothing to be ashamed of.

I first moved to Boston in 1998 and it was hard to find a bar in the city showing the US in the world cup. This year you needed to be 2 hours early just to get in to the Banshee, thousands packed city hall plaza, everywhere with a TV showed the games. Thats an enormous difference in soccer interest in 16 years. Most kids under 30 with an interest in sport knows about the EPL and Liverpool will sell out Fenway again this Summer.

That's an enormous difference in international soccer interest, to be sure. The question is, why hasn't any of this interest in international soccer translated into MLS interest? The market share for the Revs in Boston is absolutely pathetic, its media is more or less MIA on all things Revs,

For MLS to work in New England, the team needs to be located in the center of the largest urban environment, i.e greater Boston. It might do alright in Providence but it would thrive in Boston. I have so many friends who won't make the trip to Foxboro because they play on a plastic pitch and the stadium sucks the life out of a small crowd. To a man, these lads reckon they would buy a season ticket if they could take the T and grab a few beers before/after.

You can take the T to Providence too, you know - and with the kind of investment that the commuter rail and Amtrak need to be getting anyway, in the future, South Station to Fox Point or the Jewelry District (the most likely landing spots for a Revs Stadium) could take about the same amount of time as Lynn or Riverside to the Seaport would.

I would love it if a new stadium was built in Boston, preferably in the inner belt Somerville!
Kraft, however, has no incentive to move the team and will keep fobbing the fans off with BS.

Kraft has an incentive to move the team if the city he's moving to says "we'll pay for this." Without that, it makes no financial sense for him to move. Unfortunately for him, Boston (and Somerville) are probably not going to give him the kind of sweetheart deal he wants for this to make sense, nor should they.

Providence, however, is in desperate need of new venue space, and the math on paying for a stadium to attract the Revs to town makes sense there. Putting it in the Jewelry District would also singlehandedly bring that place back to life in a way that no other proposal really could.

It's a shame because he did so much to start the league and now the Revs risk getting left far far behind.

The word that doesn't belong in this sentence is "risk." They've already been left behind. Every other MLS city, even the ones where soccer is still played in an NFL stadium, have embraced their teams. Soccer has already arrived in places like Seattle, DC, and Florida - but not in Boston, where the Revs are more than a decade behind the rest of the league.

Every year they stay put is another year they slip farther and farther back, until they finally become an international embarrassment too large to ignore, and Don Garber is forced to try and take control of the team away from the Krafts. Unfortunately, the Krafts can put up a much harder fight than Chivas ever could, and even if Garber is ultimately successful in his pyrrhic victory over them, he still has to get through the city of Boston in order to actually move the team here.

Meanwhile, Providence is open for business no matter what shmessy or datadyne007 or fattony or underground or davem or anyone else want to say about why Rhode Island sucks and is bad. If Providence is extending the olive branch and has a serious proposal on the table that makes sense for the city and Boston is saying "well maybe, we'll see what happens, perhaps we could roll this into an Olympics proposal, check back with us in a few years and maybe we'll be receptive to you guys moving here in time for 2025," then the question is not 'which of these two cities do I move to?' - it's 'move to Providence now, or wait and hope that the stars align and a move to Boston becomes possible later?'

And frankly I've seen nothing to indicate that Boston wants a soccer stadium outside of the context of "something we can recycle an Olympics stadium into," and Boston 2024 isn't happening - so framing this as a huge opportunity cost makes no sense to me because the real opportunity cost is being paid every single day they stay in Foxboro.

And again, I challenge shmessy to tell me when the last time he went to a Revs game at Gillette was. I'm assuming he hasn't, and I'm also assuming that almost everyone else who claims they'd abandon the team after a move into Providence hasn't gone to any games at Gillette recently, either. They might be watching the Revs on TV, but getting the TV broadcast is possible no matter where the actual game is happening, and disowning the franchise because they chose to move to Providence now instead of hoping that a move to Boston becomes possible and they move later strikes me as an extremely sour grapes thing to do.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

CBS, I started to type a whole big post and deleted it. You know what? You are right.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

There isn't a US city where the local MLS team is the most popular. Not in Seattle, not in Kansas City, not in Portland and certainly not in cities like Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Philadelphia and New York. So if you're going to say Boston is a weak soccer market as far as the MLS goes, then you might as well say the bulk of the major cities in this country are also weak soccer markets.

A soccer specific stadium is not going to be the magic bullet to make the Revs more relevant in the Boston sports scene.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

A soccer specific stadium is not going to be the magic bullet to make the Revs more relevant in the Boston sports scene.

No, the location will be the magic bullet. They average around 15,000 per game at Gillette. That number could easily increase to 18-20,000 with a stadium in the urban area along rapid transit.

The soccer specific stadium improves that atmosphere significantly. 15,000 people in a stadium built to hold 67,000 feels empty and dead. Atmosphere does a lot to keep bringing fans back. Most Sox fans can tell you what it felt like to walk into Fenway the first time experience the sights, sounds, and smells. Nobody is going to call watching the Revs at Gillette "electric." The same number of fans in a smaller stadium would make the place feel packed (17,000 is around the capacity of The Garden), and significantly improve the MLS experience in New England.

A more accessible stadium and a soccer specific stadium would definitely bring in new fans.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

There isn't a US city where the local MLS team is the most popular. Not in Seattle, not in Kansas City, not in Portland and certainly not in cities like Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Philadelphia and New York. So if you're going to say Boston is a weak soccer market as far as the MLS goes, then you might as well say the bulk of the major cities in this country are also weak soccer markets.

A soccer specific stadium is not going to be the magic bullet to make the Revs more relevant in the Boston sports scene.

I never said that the MLS team was the most popular in any of the cities where MLS exists. I said all of those cities have embraced their MLS teams, which is a different metric.

Places like Seattle, Portland, Houston, Dallas, and other MLS cities actually engage with their MLS teams, and the media covers them. Even though MLS is third, fourth, or fifth in popularity behind other teams in these places, it doesn't go unnoticed.

It's different in Boston. WEEI doesn't cover the Revs, WBZ and CSNNE barely notice they exist, it's a challenge to find a bar that has the Revs game on, and 90% of the soccer chatter that goes on around here is - as Ruairi lamented - about the World Cup, EPL, or other international and foreign competitions.

And you're right, moving the team alone isn't going to fix it, whether they move to Boston or anywhere else. At the end of the day, the Revs have a bad product and the Krafts should be held accountable for fielding teams that range from mediocre to terrible on top of everything else they've done wrong.

Of course, if we got into a conversation about how to fix the Revs roster here, that'd actually put us ahead of both sports radio stations and at least one of our sports television stations as far as Revs coverage goes, which is the point I'm trying to make with regards to this being a weak soccer market.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

That's an enormous difference in international soccer interest, to be sure. The question is, why hasn't any of this interest in international soccer translated into MLS interest? The market share for the Revs in Boston is absolutely pathetic, its media is more or less MIA on all things Revs.

Because the New England Revolution have been in Foxborough this whole time and the Krafts have done little to nothing to build any interest in the team.

You can take the T to Providence too, you know - and with the kind of investment that the commuter rail and Amtrak need to be getting anyway, in the future, South Station to Fox Point or the Jewelry District (the most likely landing spots for a Revs Stadium) could take about the same amount of time as Lynn or Riverside to the Seaport would.

There is a huge difference between being accessible by rapid transit and being accessible by commuter rail; rapid transit has higher frequencies, lower costs, and is easier to use.

I think you are also being a bit dishonest about the time and effort it would take to get to and from games in Providence from Boston using the Commuter Rail because you're ignoring the transfers that would be required for such a trip. To get to a stadium in the Jewelry District you would need to take the T to a relevant Commuter Rail station to get on a Providence train, take the Commuter Rail to Providence, and then transfer to whatever public transit in Providence would take you to the stadium. That isn't convenient at all and would take far longer than any trip within the T's rapid transit system, especially if you rely on a bus transfer or two to get you to the T in the first place.

Kraft has an incentive to move the team if the city he's moving to says "we'll pay for this." Without that, it makes no financial sense for him to move. Unfortunately for him, Boston (and Somerville) are probably not going to give him the kind of sweetheart deal he wants for this to make sense, nor should they.

Even if Providence pays for the stadium does it still make financial sense to move to Providence? This is highly debatable and you can revisit the arguments made in the last few pages.

The word that doesn't belong in this sentence is "risk." They've already been left behind. Every other MLS city, even the ones where soccer is still played in an NFL stadium, have embraced their teams. Soccer has already arrived in places like Seattle, DC, and Florida - but not in Boston, where the Revs are more than a decade behind the rest of the league.

The singular team that plays in an NFL stadium other than the Revolution are the Sounders. That stadium is downtown and transit accessible.

The reason that the Revolution are not doing well compared to other teams has nothing to do with the city of Boston, is has entirely to do with its front office. You keep blaming problems that are caused by the Revolution's front office like their inability to get a stadium deal and their inability to market their team on either Boston's city governments or Bostonians.

Every year they stay put is another year they slip farther and farther back, until they finally become an international embarrassment too large to ignore, and Don Garber is forced to try and take control of the team away from the Krafts. Unfortunately, the Krafts can put up a much harder fight than Chivas ever could, and even if Garber is ultimately successful in his pyrrhic victory over them, he still has to get through the city of Boston in order to actually move the team here.

That is assuming that he needs to get "through" Boston, or Somerville, or Revere in order to get a deal done.

Meanwhile, Providence is open for business no matter what shmessy or datadyne007 or fattony or underground or davem or anyone else want to say about why Rhode Island sucks and is bad. If Providence is extending the olive branch and has a serious proposal on the table that makes sense for the city and Boston is saying "well maybe, we'll see what happens, perhaps we could roll this into an Olympics proposal, check back with us in a few years and maybe we'll be receptive to you guys moving here in time for 2025," then the question is not 'which of these two cities do I move to?' - it's 'move to Providence now, or wait and hope that the stars align and a move to Boston becomes possible later?'

And frankly I've seen nothing to indicate that Boston wants a soccer stadium outside of the context of "something we can recycle an Olympics stadium into," and Boston 2024 isn't happening - so framing this as a huge opportunity cost makes no sense to me because the real opportunity cost is being paid every single day they stay in Foxboro.

If you have seen nothing to indicate that Boston (or Somerville or Revere) would want a soccer specific stadium then you haven't been reading this thread or been following this discussion.

This article was posted a few pages ago. In it Mayor Walsh talks about the idea of a soccer stadium, with no mention of the Olympics whatsoever. Somerville and Revere have also been in talks for a stadium for years now, long before any serious talks or discussions for the 2024 Olympics materialized. Fans have been pushing for a soccer specific stadium ever since the Columbus Crew built theirs in 1999.

And again, I challenge shmessy to tell me when the last time he went to a Revs game at Gillette was. I'm assuming he hasn't, and I'm also assuming that almost everyone else who claims they'd abandon the team after a move into Providence hasn't gone to any games at Gillette recently, either. They might be watching the Revs on TV, but getting the TV broadcast is possible no matter where the actual game is happening, and disowning the franchise because they chose to move to Providence now instead of hoping that a move to Boston becomes possible and they move later strikes me as an extremely sour grapes thing to do.

Going to a Revolution game has nothing to do with anyone's ability to engage with this discussion. Someone who doesn't follow soccer at all can see the differences between moving to Providence or Boston.

And I don't think anyone is saying that they would stop being Revolution fans if the team moved to Providence. What I see in this thread, on other forums, and from people in real life is that people aren't Revolution fans but would become fans if the team moved to the Boston area.

You keep saying that people are slamming Providence or that people are holding their fandom hostage over a potential move to Providence but I'm not seeing any of that happening.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

CBS, I live in Maryland, but I'm in the financial industry and I have eyes.

You keep saying "Providence vs. Boston" over and over, but this thread is about Somerville which is not Boston. While it IS in the Boston metro area, the political decisions would not be made by Boston pols.

The Krafts are great businessmen and there is no way they will give up the 10th largest US market (and the 6th richest per capita) for the 38th (and the 89th richest per capita metro area - behind such powerhouses as Akron and Peoria-- in the state with the highest unemployment rate). It would be financial malpractice. They are not stupid.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Metropolitan_Statistical_Areas

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highest-income_metropolitan_statistical_areas_in_the_United_States

You seem like a person with a healthy loyalty to your hometown and I think that is admirable. But be honest. The only reason you feel it could happen is because you want it to. I live here in Maryland and attend 1-2 United games per season. I have no dog in this fight. As Belichick would say, "it is what it is". You are typing with your heart.

But money makes the world go 'round. The sooner you learn that truism, the better off you will be in these discussions.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

I don't follow soccer at all, so this is me asking an honest question:
Is part of the Revs problem that Boston has 4 major professional sports teams? Are there any other cities with a baseball, basketball, football and hockey team that have a very popular MLS franchise?
I ask because I feel like one of the things that kills college athletics in Boston (and NY, Philly, etc.) is that the populace is invested in the pro teams.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

I don't follow soccer at all, so this is me asking an honest question:
Is part of the Revs problem that Boston has 4 major professional sports teams? Are there any other cities with a baseball, basketball, football and hockey team that have a very popular MLS franchise?
I ask because I feel like one of the things that kills college athletics in Boston (and NY, Philly, etc.) is that the populace is invested in the pro teams.

What kills the Revs right now is that their fans have to go to Foxboro to see a game in someone else's stadium. If they were in Boston or Somerville or Revere on a T station, their avg attendance would easily jump from 15K to 25K+ (and, more importantly, they would sell many corporate luxury boxes). The VCs and Biotechs would turn out for that.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

Because the New England Revolution have been in Foxborough this whole time and the Krafts have done little to nothing to build any interest in the team.

Agreed. But there's plenty that they could be doing long before an actual stadium move and they've done none of the other things either - as evidenced by lackluster media coverage, poor advertising of the team, lackluster community engagement (other than the World Cup viewing party at City Hall, what was the last event the Revs sponsored or helped produce in Boston?), no attempt to even leverage the Gillette Stadium commuter rail stop for the barest hints of a mass transit connection to the stadium - never mind anything like a party bus or other shuttle - and so on, and so forth.

The list of problems goes long beyond the lack of a soccer stadium but this thread is about a soccer stadium and it's the largest problem that could hypothetically be solved without a protracted fight over the Revs ownership rights.

There is a huge difference between being accessible by rapid transit and being accessible by commuter rail; rapid transit has higher frequencies, lower costs, and is easier to use.

I think you are also being a bit dishonest about the time and effort it would take to get to and from games in Providence from Boston using the Commuter Rail because you're ignoring the transfers that would be required for such a trip. To get to a stadium in the Jewelry District you would need to take the T to a relevant Commuter Rail station to get on a Providence train, take the Commuter Rail to Providence, and then transfer to whatever public transit in Providence would take you to the stadium. That isn't convenient at all and would take far longer than any trip within the T's rapid transit system, especially if you rely on a bus transfer or two to get you to the T in the first place.

Prime real estate for a soccer specific stadium on the north side of the Jewelry District is reachable on foot from the train station - it's about a 10 minute walk.

I don't think I'm being dishonest at all. Lower frequencies on the Providence Line relative to the subways are not a function of either mode, and frequency can - and will - improve on the Providence Line. The speed of travel between South Station and Providence Station can easily get brought up to the point where it takes about as long to make that trip as it does to ride from Alewife to Silver Line Way.

The fact is that no matter where you place the stadium, it's always going to be closer to some people than it is to others. The center of Boston is about the only place in the city where it could go and be readily accessible to everyone in the metro area with about the same distance/effort to travel there.

It probably isn't going into the center of Boston even if it moves into the city. It's going somewhere like where South Bay Center is, or the seaport, or - yes! - Assembly Row, or Readville. All of these places are easier for parts of the city to access and harder for other parts of the city to access. It's the same with Providence - people near South Station or in Back Bay or somewhere on the Red/Orange/Fairmount Lines are going to find it easier to get to than people in Lynn or Newton would.

Even if Providence pays for the stadium does it still make financial sense to move to Providence? This is highly debatable and you can revisit the arguments made in the last few pages.

I'm open to seeing the hard numbers crunched on this, and I'm sure we're going to get some ideas of what those numbers are when this thing moves forward if it does indeed move forward.

The singular team that plays in an NFL stadium other than the Revolution are the Sounders. That stadium is downtown and transit accessible.

The reason that the Revolution are not doing well compared to other teams has nothing to do with the city of Boston, is has entirely to do with its front office. You keep blaming problems that are caused by the Revolution's front office like their inability to get a stadium deal and their inability to market their team on either Boston's city governments or Bostonians.

I don't think the city of Boston or its residents can escape culpability here since it took 18 damn years for just one publication to find the testicular fortitude to actually call the Krafts out for being terrible owners, and - again, I can't stress this enough - almost all of our sports-specific media is still MIA on the Revs.

In order to escape blame for this, Boston needed to be a hell of a lot more vocal, and it hasn't been.

That is assuming that he needs to get "through" Boston, or Somerville, or Revere in order to get a deal done.



If you have seen nothing to indicate that Boston (or Somerville or Revere) would want a soccer specific stadium then you haven't been reading this thread or been following this discussion.

This article was posted a few pages ago. In it Mayor Walsh talks about the idea of a soccer stadium, with no mention of the Olympics whatsoever. Somerville and Revere have also been in talks for a stadium for years now, long before any serious talks or discussions for the 2024 Olympics materialized. Fans have been pushing for a soccer specific stadium ever since the Columbus Crew built theirs in 1999.

Talks that, I should note, have gone absolutely nowhere. We got a name change of one of Somerville's streets to Revolution Way and that's about as substantial a result as I can think of coming from these talks.

I'm not psychic, but I'm willing to bet that Somerville and Revere are just as disinterested in paying for this thing as Boston is and that's why the talks have gone nowhere. And again, the economics of Providence paying for a stadium - because they desperately need the venue space - make sense. That's the true reason I support the move.

As for Walsh?

Mayor Walsh said:
“It’s worth looking at. I’m open to a lot of ideas. It’s about the growth of Boston. It’s something I wouldn’t turn down. There will have to be a lot of discussions about the location. I don’t know where it would go. We will have to see.”

As far as wish-washy statements from politicians go, this is far from the worst I've ever seen, but I'd hardly call this a ringing endorsement - and, pointedly, this particular piece of information is coming on the heels of Boston making the Olympics shortlist, bringing us right back to the idea that the soccer stadium is only moving forward as a rider on the Olympics package.

Going to a Revolution game has nothing to do with anyone's ability to engage with this discussion. Someone who doesn't follow soccer at all can see the differences between moving to Providence or Boston.

And I don't think anyone is saying that they would stop being Revolution fans if the team moved to Providence. What I see in this thread, on other forums, and from people in real life is that people aren't Revolution fans but would become fans if the team moved to the Boston area.

You keep saying that people are slamming Providence or that people are holding their fandom hostage over a potential move to Providence but I'm not seeing any of that happening.

Maybe I'm reading all of these posts wrong, then, but it's time for a montage!

Providence Slamming Montage said:
Didn't mean to attack the messenger. Just that the article is so much fluff. A couple of RI pols called the Revs office and the Revs office were polite and didn't choke laughing. In fact, the Revs may use it as a negotiating tool in their talks with pols from areas where they could actually MAKE MONEY in the long term (i.e. in a state that doesn't have the highest US unemployment rate).

This discussion is getting ridiculous. Seattle puts 40,000 butts in the seats of their downtown stadium. New York is establishing a second team in subway-connected Yankee Stadium. MLS is growing year. Providence would leave a TREMENDOUS amount of money on the table. Why move the Pats there while we are at it?

In the short term, the Revs are not going anywhere. In the long term, they are moving to metro Boston with rapid transit access. Kraft is not an idiot. The team will move at time and to a place where it will make more money for him than it does right now in Foxborough. Some other location with a big parking lot is not going to significantly increase attendance from what they already pull. Only an URBAN location is going to make a big enough difference to justify the cost of the stadium.

This just in: Providence "not an urban location," declares fattony on popular architecture Boston dotcom forum site.

This whole argument is getting pretty silly. I know Rhode Islanders feel the need to compensate for their small size, but Providence vs Boston, seriously?

Being the number one team in Providence would still generate less revenue than being the #4 team in Boston. Its the same reason you don't have the Garden State Giants or the NJ Jets. If Providence wasn't so close to Boston sure it makes sense to locate a major sports team there. But it's perpetually in Boston's shadow, and nothing is changing that.

There is also national, and multinational appeal to consider. Half the people in our country probably couldn't find Providence on a map. I lived in NY and was only aware of it from road signs. Outside this country, probably no one. EVERYONE knows Boston.

The first use of Providence vs Boston in this thread was not by me. Also, ha ha, size jokes about a state! Those are always funny and never played out!

It's not a Providence vs. Boston thing, because Providence isn't even in the running. It's walking a 5k while Boston is doing a marathon. It's in no way like Baltimore and Washington, an older established city doing its own thing, and a newer city doing a completely separate thing, both of which are not large enough to attract the media attention they do, but together are. (Also keeping in mind that DC and Baltimore both kinda suck to live in.) Providence leaches off of Boston, profiting from Bostons status as a mass-media hub, a transit hub, an educational hub, etc. Without Boston, Providence would be like Montpelier. Without Providence, Boston would be... basically the same. Probably a bit larger and wealthier, with more CVS's and lemonade. It's a parasitic relationship, not a symbiotic one.

Seriously comparing Providence and Boston, or implying they are in any way equals or have nearly the same branding draw, is ludicrous. I really like Providence, would consider moving there, and have always had fun in the city. But, saying that Providence and Boston are linked just makes the entire rest of your argument loose credibility and fall apart. They aren't going to move to Providence because it moves them further away from an iconic city, and ties them to a B-class one. Them playing at Gilette links them to the Pats, which links them to Boston. Moving to Providence gets rid of that tie.

They will either stay in Foxboro and rot, the franchise will be bought and moved to another region entirely, or they will move to Boston/Somerville/Revere.

But moving the Sonics to OKC WAS unbelievable, and moving a team back (Sacramento, Minnesota, LAC, and even OKC) or starting a new franchise gets talked about all the time. And at least OKC is a growth area. Providence as a growth market? It's a nice town, but no. The Nielson media market rankings have them below Buffalo, a city with a football team desperately trying to move to Toronto. Meanwhile, you'd be leaving a Boston media market that Nielson ranks 7th, and that's A) been growing recently, and B) is home to some of the biggest spenders in the country. Why, if you were the business people in charge of MLS, would you do that?

Again, why would MLS leave the big bucks of Boston for the relative small bucks of Providence? Who's filling those luxury boxes in Providence? Which corporations are springing for pricy season seats? Who's paying to advertise on the shirt, Dels?
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

I don't follow soccer at all, so this is me asking an honest question:
Is part of the Revs problem that Boston has 4 major professional sports teams? Are there any other cities with a baseball, basketball, football and hockey team that have a very popular MLS franchise?
I ask because I feel like one of the things that kills college athletics in Boston (and NY, Philly, etc.) is that the populace is invested in the pro teams.

The problem is that the European leagues are so popular here. You have a large number of people that will get up early on the weekends to watch Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool, etc. The Banshee, Lir and Phoenix Landing always have good crowds on the weekends. You don't see that for the Revs.

And yes, the fact that we have 4 sports teams that are well supported and have been around for a while is another big reason. It's the same reason in cities like Philadelphia, NYC, Chicago for example the MLS is an afterthought.

I am sure having a new, SSS in an area that is accessible will certainly help the attendance and it will go a very long way to making the atmosphere a lot better. But the MLS has an issue where it's not even the most popular soccer league in its own country.
 
Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

CBS, you quoted underground's question:

"Originally Posted by underground
Again, why would MLS leave the big bucks of Boston for the relative small bucks of Providence? Who's filling those luxury boxes in Providence? Which corporations are springing for pricy season seats? Who's paying to advertise on the shirt, Dels?"

I don't see an answer to it.

Just because Providence is desperate and will give Kraft a sweetheart deal on the land and stadium doesn't mean that is an advantage. If that were the only issue then Alabama or West Virginia would have professional sports teams instead of Toyota assembly plants. That kind of thing works for manufacturing, not for pro sports teams that need big spenders to walk through the gates, drink the craft beer and eat the jumbo shrimp.

Most people know that Kraft ALREADY turned his back on a desperate city who would have given him a sweetheart deal in the late 90's. What about the Hartford template do you not understand? If you want to ignore that lesson, do so. The rest of us can see with our eyes wide open.

CBS, it all comes down to M-O-N-E-Y - - - not the upfront bags o' cash, but the ongoing market power money.
 
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Re: Somerville Soccer Stadium

CBS, you quoted underground's question:

"Originally Posted by underground
Again, why would MLS leave the big bucks of Boston for the relative small bucks of Providence? Who's filling those luxury boxes in Providence? Which corporations are springing for pricy season seats? Who's paying to advertise on the shirt, Dels?"

I don't see an answer to it.

I answered it on the very same page:

Ha ha, of course, Dels is literally the only notable thing from Rhode Island ever in the whole entire history of the state.

Oh, wait...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Companies_based_in_Rhode_Island

Here's some names you might recognize:
  • Alex and Ani
  • Amica Mutual Insurance
  • Citizens Financial Group, Inc.
  • CVS Caremark Corporation
  • Gilbane
  • Hasbro, Inc.

Providence is enjoying the rising tide of urbanism lifting all boats just as much as Boston is. The city is far from perfect, but it is very much an active and lively place to be - a renaissance city and the "creative capital." It has some big name universities of its own (Brown, RISD), a fun cultural identity, and clam cakes (the greatest thing ever created on the face of this planet).

But don't just take my waxing poetic at face value, look at it by the numbers:
http://www.providencejournal.com/br...irst-population-growth-in-nearly-a-decade.ece
http://www.city-data.com/city/Providence-Rhode-Island.html
http://www.areavibes.com/providence-ri/demographics/
http://www.clrsearch.com/Providence-Demographics/RI/Quality-of-Life
 

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