Bloomberg Business Week recently ranked El Paso number 10 in “Forty Strongest U.S. Metro Economies”. More than 75 of the fortune 500 companies have a presence in El Paso or Juarez. Baseball enthusiasm is far far better than in Anaheim.
You are probably right but not because it wouldn't work. While poking around I found this juxtaposition in unrelated articles, El Paso is the safest city in North America & Juarez is the most dangerous.
We don't want to be in the same division (or even league) as other Texas teams. That is boring. Cowboys and Texans are not in the same division or league. I'd rather root for the Rangers in a different league. Being in the same league as the MLB elite (Yankees, Red Sox) gives us great national exposure, and has contributed to our rise...
Yep, the cartels have a code. Also curious, @BlindHog, what's the cable/satellite potential viewership across the border? # of households and such that would be actual/potential viewers for whatever potential sports networks they'd have?
Agreed with your post. Just wondering if you remember the saveourrockets.com movement, who spearheaded it, and which fledgling-but-already-awesome fansite was connected with it?
The powers that be in Houston (political and business leaders) basically told Bettencourt to shut up if he wanted a political future in the Houston area. They told him he didn't have to support the revised package that was being put on the ballot, but do not ACTIVELY go against it. I think he just said it was "better" than the first proposal. Bettencourt is now ruining the future of Texas as a state senator.
Holy ****. Rumor I’m hearing is that the A’s want to buy the Tropicana, tear it down, and build their ballpark right there on the strip. That would be about the ballsiest thing ever. Talk about a premier location.
That would be AMAZING. Reminiscent of the historical showmanship displayed by the Athletics' former owner Charlie Finley.
It would be incredible. I can’t see it actually happening, but they’re playing for keeps if they pull that off.
Considering that Stern and his pack of devils helped move Seattle to OKC, I'm 100% certain the Rockets would be in Kentucky if Toyota Center wasn't built. You said it best, media markets matter way more, but back then it was a game to see how much taxpayer money you could squeeze out of a city.
Hard to imagine that actually happening. Why pay the extra cost to be on the Strip and potential security issues with so much foot traffic, when you could build close by and it not really make a difference attendance wise.
Imagine being an Oakland fan, watching the perennial cheapskates of the league leave and spend billions to go to Vegas, and become top spenders every year.
That ownership group has never really shown a willingness to spend, so I’m guessing they’d just pocket any extra cash. If they build on the Tropicana though I think attendance will be off the charts.