Originally Posted by
Urbanized
For the record I was routinely telling people as far back as 1999 that I believed OKC could support an NBA or an NHL team, in part because of the “only game in town” status a team would enjoy and in part because I knew we were about to have a paid-for NBA/NHL-capable arena (cannot be understated).
...The point is that the business model and footprint of the All-Star Game has changed dramatically since many cities last hosted it. I won’t be surprised if very soon it requires an enclosed football stadium for the game itself, which they have already experimented with.
The game has moved away from an event which can be rotated around all of the cities in the league. It simply has. And again, I don’t think advocates are fully aware of the activity level that weekend brings to a city. Places like NYC, LA, Vegas, Dallas, even New Orleans and San Antonio are equipped for it. Most other places would feel like they had a tiger by the tail. It’s...a lot.
Concede: Urbanized, your future trend projection of the NBA All Star Classic will come true.
Why: The college final four has moved in that direction with success, the NBA will follow. There will be a bid process only among football domed-stadium cities, NBA cities with domed stadium & Las Vegas will be given preference:
U. S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis will host the 2018 Superbowl.
Atlanta, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles-Inglewood, Minneapolis, New Orleans, Phoenix, Seattle, St. Louis & San Antonio.
The above cities all have the hotel accommodations as well as the facilities. It's all about the almighty dollar.
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