Look. No one is saying that the [non] public process is a good one. No one is saying that the team owners don't have the city by the balls. The fact of the matter is, that OKC needs the Thunder. The risk [of the team moving] is not worth the reward.
The hill to die on for changing the 1% controlling nearly every aspect of life is not the new arena in OKC.
If you love OKC, regardless of NBA fandom, you should vote yes.
I agree. Especially with the last sentence. I don't like basketball. I got somewhat wrapped up in the bandwagon the first 4 or 5 years but then my dislike for basketball took over again. I'm still going to vote yes. I believe there are advantages for OKC to continually make improvements that are seen by the rest of the country. And this will be talked about in other NBA cities that will start comparing their arenas to our new arena.
Allow me to rephrase:
Professional Team relocations happen often enough that if the Thunder are sold to an out of state ownership group, we should be acutely aware of the possibility that the team gets moved even if we build this arena. If we have a new arena with no team, we will have set our city back by a decade.
But the new arena is contingent on a signed, binding lease for 25 or so years. If they sell, and the owners break the lease, it's still binding, even under new ownership. OKC would get a certain amount for breach of contract (and I'm not just talking the remaining lease amount). Hence why he mentioned it when he put out the release. That lease is a tool to keep the arena with a minimum of 41 dates a year, each generating a significant amount of revenue around downtown, as well (hotels, restaurants, etc.).
Speaking of Holt- this is awesome. You don't get on this list thinking small. Okc can continue to ascend to the top tier. Keep it up!!!! Vote yes!!
https://kfor.com/news/local/oklahoma...ential-people/
Yeah, that's why the details do matter and it's a bummer we won't know what those terms are before we vote.
It would be interesting to know how much the rent is, what other revenue will they participate in, and how painful would breaking the lease be for them or anyone they sold the team to.
Admittedly, I don't think most voters are going to consider that or care, but clearly they do consider the raw numbers at face value and everyone has a different idea of what a "significant contribution" is.
No...billionaires don't stay billionaires by tying their money up in contracts they can't get out of at a reasonable cost. If you think owners are going to sign a poison pill lease that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars to break, you have an equal misconception of billionaires. That's what sports franchises managers do that get them fired by the billionaires.
In the deals that you site to compare tenant participation in construction of the venue, is there a relationship between how much is contributed and how much revenue participation the tenant(s) receive.
That is, it's easy to compare the front end contribution, but what are the differences in back end compensation?
Obviously, any deal where the the financing is entirely private, those investors will own and operate the venue, but in deals where there's public / private investment splits, what do the revenue splits look like and how do they compare?
With $1.25B tax dollars coming to this arena, over the 25 term lease, that comes out to $50M per year. They are not doing a $10M+/year lease. Most teams are only paying a few million per year.
https://inf.news/en/sport/f8159488d7...e94ef6394.html
It's not just rent... It's the concessions, suite revenue, and a ton of other things.
I simply can't believe that on net, this is going to end up costing the Thunder much (if any) more than the current deal. They were the ones insisting on a new arena, after all. They didn't do that to make less profit -- otherwise, why would they want it?
Also, remember the Thunder owners were also the ones behind the proposed Thunder Alley development with outside bars and restaurants. I would be surprised if something like that wasn't included and that the ownership gets rights to it, or at least a portion.
RIght. They get a piece of of those things during their events. I think most of it is tiered, but does not go above 50%. I think the only splits they receive outside of Thunder events is 25% or so of luxury revenue.
So, they pay rent and also create 40-45 nights of guaranteed revenue (though not a guaranteed amount).
I'm just trying to figure out that if they contribute more to the arena, should their end of the splits go up / pay less rent? Should they get more of non-thunder revenue in that case?
I'm honestly not trying to be antagonizing or blindly defending the Thunder's deal. I'm just trying to get a better understanding of these deals and how they compare beyond just the up front numbers.
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