Originally Posted by
shawnw
it was basically a requirement to keep the WCWS beyond the next few years.
We have benchmarks to meet: Don't think for one minute that we are a guaranteed host for this event.
That backdrop provides insight why Brassfield was filled with emotion last week when the NCAA announced Oklahoma City will host the Women’s College World Series through 2035, provided the city makes good on its promise to complete a four-phase renovation.
What grabbed everyone’s attention is attendance continued to rise to 60,000 a year, even though the Sooners didn’t make it to the WCWS the next six years (2005-2010).
Hoover Metropolitan Stadium: Capacity: 10,800 plus lawn seating and standing room. This city is poised to host the WCWS.
Hoover, AL is the largest suburb of Birmingham with a population 84,126 (size of Edmond, OK). They currently host the SEC's baseball, softball & soccer tournaments. Hoover has hosted the NCAA Division I College Cup men's soccer national championship the last two seasons.
Oklahoma City needs to stay on schedule (Phases II, IIb, III, IV) if they want to keep this event until 2035. There will be an OKC bond issue in 2017 that will finance the completion of these phases.
We have work to get done to keep this ASA Hall of Fame Stadium viable.
The Softball Hall of Fame Museum, ASA Hall of Fame Complex (practice fields), Remington Park, Oklahoma City Zoo and I-35 access to hotels downtown are the keys for this event.
Assisted by private donations and
OG&E paying several hundred thousand dollars for naming rights of ASA Hall of Fame Stadium, Oklahoma City officials are halfway to $23 million.
A bond election in December 2017 also will help finance the four-phase project.
Reference: "A look at the future of the WCWS and ASA Hall of Fame Stadium." http://oklahoman.com/a-look-at-the-f...rticle/4869995
"Oklahoma City looks oh-so pretty... ...as I get my kicks on Route 66." --Nat King Cole.
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