Pete
09-22-2005, 09:46 AM
It's obvious this is a possibility, but this article paints a very positive picture of that becoming a reality... Let's hope OKC really gets behind this team and proves to the nation we are big-time!
Major-league status may be here to stay
By Berry Tramel
The Oklahoman
You knew it had really happened when you spotted the man mountain in the sharp suit. He looked familiar. About the right age. Right size. Might it be, could it actually be...
Willis Reed?
All that talk about NBA superstars coming to town if the Hornets hung their hats at the Ford Center? Garnett and Iverson and Shaq and Dirk and Yao and Duncan? We wanted to believe it, wanted to embrace it, but sometimes you don’t dare dream so big, lest it wake you to reality.
But dreams became truth Wednesday, when our sleepy pioneer burg finally scaled the major-league mountain. All the dreamers through all the years, not just Mayor Mick and commerce magnate Clay Bennett, but their forerunners in politics and business, the visionaries who pushed for not just the Ford Center but the Myriad and State Fair Arena before it.
And there was Reed, the New York Knickerbocker legend, now the Hornet vice president, and you didn’t have to pinch yourself. Those NBA stars are on their way, because here was one now.
Oklahoma City. Major league.
Cornett called Wednesday not so much a celebration as validation, saying we are a faith-based community that works hard and dreams big.
That hard work and those big dreams have led to this faith: this is no temporary status, this elevation of Oklahoma City to the fraternity of New York and Chicago and Phoenix and LA and Dallas.
We are here to stay, if we so desire.
“This team will never leave,” said an OKC leader who helped broker the deal.
The Hornets are ours, if we want them. If we show up at the Ford Center - and why wouldn’t we with the sweetheart ticket prices announced Wednesday? - we will make Hornets owner George Shinn want to call this home.
Everyone from the NBA to the Hornets to Oklahoma City officials is very sensitive to the plight of New Orleans, and no one wants to come across as a franchise thief. But the truth is: New Orleans is years away, if ever, from returning to major-league status.
There were a couple of hints Wednesday that the Hornets know they aren’t going back.
When asked about possibly playing games late in the season in the New Orleans Arena, Shinn asked the reasonable question if there would be any people in the city, much less those interested in going to a basketball game.
And the Hornets’ brass was adamant with the schedule-makers that Oklahoma City get to host every NBA franchise this season, much to the chagrin of Baton Rouge, La., which will host six games but not the Miami Heat, who feature LSU’s own Shaquille O’Neal. That’s a sign the Hornets are interested in making this an Oklahoma City audition.
Make no mistake, pro basketball is gone from New Orleans. So sometime next year, Shinn must decide the future of his franchise, and why not Oklahoma City?
“We’re going to prove to the world that Oklahoma City is a major-league city,” Shinn said. “The potential and everything’s here to make that happen.”
Shinn already did it once, in Charlotte, N.C., now a certified Southern metropolis but once questioned as a major-league prospect. Shinn’s Hornets promptly led the NBA in attendance seven straight years before the honeymoon ended because of the NBA lockout, the arrival of the NFL Panthers and Shinn’s personal behavior, which scandalized the city in a sexual-harassment trial.
Shinn, just like all the Hornets personnel, was charming and unassuming Wednesday. No prima donnas. Not Reed, not Shinn, not coach Byron Scott, not anyone.
That kind of attitude will go a long way. But not as far as the great timing.
Oklahoma City gets an NBA franchise in a year when OU football is down, so sports spenders might be looking for new avenues. And with oil prices still high, our corporate economy is strong.
Expect the business community to come through.
“I told a Hornets executive, ‘You won’t fail in Oklahoma City,’” said Brad Lund of Express Sports, whose company runs the minor-league Blazers and RedHawks and has helped the Hornets make the transition to OKC.
“The community and corporate pride in this metro area is No. 1 in the country for a midsize city.”
Lund referred to the other events the Ford Center has wrought.
“Paul McCartney didn’t fail,” Lund said. “Britney Spears didn’t fail. NCAA regionals didn’t fail.”
If corporate Oklahoma City comes through, that leaves it to the average fan. Typical NBA prices make OKC a stretch, but these prices - 7,500 tickets at $20 under, affordable season tickets - leave us no excuses.
If we want to be major-league, we can be major-league. Our choice.
The NBA works in this model. Since 1965, the league has gone into 10 cities that had no major-league franchise. It has left only one of those cities, Charlotte, and soon after Shinn’s departure, the NBA placed an expansion team in Charlotte.
“This city’s got a golden opportunity to prove itself by helping us, and we want to do everything we can to help the city,” Shinn said. “So it’s a win-win situation for both of us in this critical time.”
Critical time, maybe. Validation, maybe. But no doubt a celebration day, too.
Oklahoma City went major-league Wednesday. I say we’re never going back.
Major-league status may be here to stay
By Berry Tramel
The Oklahoman
You knew it had really happened when you spotted the man mountain in the sharp suit. He looked familiar. About the right age. Right size. Might it be, could it actually be...
Willis Reed?
All that talk about NBA superstars coming to town if the Hornets hung their hats at the Ford Center? Garnett and Iverson and Shaq and Dirk and Yao and Duncan? We wanted to believe it, wanted to embrace it, but sometimes you don’t dare dream so big, lest it wake you to reality.
But dreams became truth Wednesday, when our sleepy pioneer burg finally scaled the major-league mountain. All the dreamers through all the years, not just Mayor Mick and commerce magnate Clay Bennett, but their forerunners in politics and business, the visionaries who pushed for not just the Ford Center but the Myriad and State Fair Arena before it.
And there was Reed, the New York Knickerbocker legend, now the Hornet vice president, and you didn’t have to pinch yourself. Those NBA stars are on their way, because here was one now.
Oklahoma City. Major league.
Cornett called Wednesday not so much a celebration as validation, saying we are a faith-based community that works hard and dreams big.
That hard work and those big dreams have led to this faith: this is no temporary status, this elevation of Oklahoma City to the fraternity of New York and Chicago and Phoenix and LA and Dallas.
We are here to stay, if we so desire.
“This team will never leave,” said an OKC leader who helped broker the deal.
The Hornets are ours, if we want them. If we show up at the Ford Center - and why wouldn’t we with the sweetheart ticket prices announced Wednesday? - we will make Hornets owner George Shinn want to call this home.
Everyone from the NBA to the Hornets to Oklahoma City officials is very sensitive to the plight of New Orleans, and no one wants to come across as a franchise thief. But the truth is: New Orleans is years away, if ever, from returning to major-league status.
There were a couple of hints Wednesday that the Hornets know they aren’t going back.
When asked about possibly playing games late in the season in the New Orleans Arena, Shinn asked the reasonable question if there would be any people in the city, much less those interested in going to a basketball game.
And the Hornets’ brass was adamant with the schedule-makers that Oklahoma City get to host every NBA franchise this season, much to the chagrin of Baton Rouge, La., which will host six games but not the Miami Heat, who feature LSU’s own Shaquille O’Neal. That’s a sign the Hornets are interested in making this an Oklahoma City audition.
Make no mistake, pro basketball is gone from New Orleans. So sometime next year, Shinn must decide the future of his franchise, and why not Oklahoma City?
“We’re going to prove to the world that Oklahoma City is a major-league city,” Shinn said. “The potential and everything’s here to make that happen.”
Shinn already did it once, in Charlotte, N.C., now a certified Southern metropolis but once questioned as a major-league prospect. Shinn’s Hornets promptly led the NBA in attendance seven straight years before the honeymoon ended because of the NBA lockout, the arrival of the NFL Panthers and Shinn’s personal behavior, which scandalized the city in a sexual-harassment trial.
Shinn, just like all the Hornets personnel, was charming and unassuming Wednesday. No prima donnas. Not Reed, not Shinn, not coach Byron Scott, not anyone.
That kind of attitude will go a long way. But not as far as the great timing.
Oklahoma City gets an NBA franchise in a year when OU football is down, so sports spenders might be looking for new avenues. And with oil prices still high, our corporate economy is strong.
Expect the business community to come through.
“I told a Hornets executive, ‘You won’t fail in Oklahoma City,’” said Brad Lund of Express Sports, whose company runs the minor-league Blazers and RedHawks and has helped the Hornets make the transition to OKC.
“The community and corporate pride in this metro area is No. 1 in the country for a midsize city.”
Lund referred to the other events the Ford Center has wrought.
“Paul McCartney didn’t fail,” Lund said. “Britney Spears didn’t fail. NCAA regionals didn’t fail.”
If corporate Oklahoma City comes through, that leaves it to the average fan. Typical NBA prices make OKC a stretch, but these prices - 7,500 tickets at $20 under, affordable season tickets - leave us no excuses.
If we want to be major-league, we can be major-league. Our choice.
The NBA works in this model. Since 1965, the league has gone into 10 cities that had no major-league franchise. It has left only one of those cities, Charlotte, and soon after Shinn’s departure, the NBA placed an expansion team in Charlotte.
“This city’s got a golden opportunity to prove itself by helping us, and we want to do everything we can to help the city,” Shinn said. “So it’s a win-win situation for both of us in this critical time.”
Critical time, maybe. Validation, maybe. But no doubt a celebration day, too.
Oklahoma City went major-league Wednesday. I say we’re never going back.