Re: NBA in Tulsa?
Originally Posted by
Laramie
Tulsa would be a nice place for an NBA franchise; however, they are within 100-miles of Oklahoma City. It is highly unlikely that the NBA would put two teams in Oklahoma on a permanent basis. This is the only 'breakthrough city' (city with no major league sports) besides Louisville which has the facilities in place to house an NBA franchise.
As far as the Kings are concerned; Anaheim is down the road with the Honda Center which is home to the NHL Mighty Ducks. This team (Kings) will probably never leave California.
Kansas City has the Sprint Center which is nice. If the NBA were to relocate to Kansas City it would become an overextented market.
Louisville has the new KFC Yum Center leased out where the NBA can not come in at this time. Old Freedom Hall would have to be a temporary home for an NBA franchise. Memphis' market almost mirrors Louisville; the advantage NBA Memhis has is the fact that the Grizzlies and the Memphis State Tigers both share the new FedEx Forum. An NBA team in Louisville playing in an antique arena (Freedom Hall) would have too much competition from the Cardinals playing in the newer facility.
St. Louis has a lease in which the Blues has exclusive rights to Scottrade Arena.
Cincinnati doesn't have an NBA-ready arena and they are too close (100 miles ) to Indianapolis. An NBA franchise would overextend its market.
Seattle has to have commitments from both the NBA and NHL to build a privately funded proposed arena. Seattle would become an overextended market with four major league franchises.
You are missing Vancouver from your analysis, which has probably the most upside to all of the available cities.
Vancouver already has an NBA arena and an ownership group committed to reversing the 'experiment' of the Grizzlies. David Stern admitted his biggest mistake was with Vancouver, and the fact he/they let that team sit there and rot. By having the same ownership as the Canucks, Vancouver's corporate support would still flow into the same channel and both teams could be well marketed (as if the Canucks need any marketing). Vancouver has an amazingly large and diverse urban population and this could play into the NBA's expansion ideas for China/Asia moreso than any other city. It is the closest major city to Asia and its demographics are well within the ability to attend games (especially if the team is marketed properly, the biggest mistake of the past). Vancouver could become the Asian/Chinese pipeline for the NBA that Toronto is for European players, and Vancouver would be a nice alternative (again) for Canadians who hate everything Toronto. Vancouver also puts a team back in the Pacific Northwest, creating a local rivalry for Portland, and helps the NBA from placiating to 'Seattle' when there still is no plan for an arena here and the NBA would very likely fail again if the NHL is necessary to get an arena. The Seattle market could be split between the two, with Seattle likely allying with Vancouver (the way Vancouver supports Seattle's NFL and MLB teams). Vancouver has three major professional sports (NHL, CFL, MLS) and the return of the NBA would not extend the market as long as Alquini (Canucks owner) also owns the NBA team. The only thing holding back Vancouver is 1) if the Maloofs would sell at least majority control to Alquini and 2) if the NBA is really serious about the China/Asia strategy (which has failed in every city they have tried thus far). One of the biggest arguments for Vancouver could be the return of natural regional alignment of teams; with OKC moving to the same league as Dallas/San Antonio and Vancouver to the NW, reducing travel costs and player fatigue that currently likely exists having OKC still in the Pac NW league.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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