By Jim Bleyer
Rio
All Suites and Casino could be site of new Rays stadium in Sin City |
The abject failure of Hillsborough County to provide a sensible location and realistic financing for a new Tampa Bay Rays stadium has emboldened two western cities that yearn for Major League Baseball.
Both Portland and Las Vegas
are rumored to be hastening plans for building state-of-the-art stadiums, even
without the awarding of a franchise or commitment for one. Their tactics
mirror the personality of each city: Vegas hasn’t disguised its glee at the
Rays’ plight; Portland, publicly at least, is playing its cards close to the
vest.
The two cities have
reportedly expedited their timetables for stadium construction.
Rays owner Stuart Sternberg
asserted last month at Major League Baseball’s winter meetings—held in Las
Vegas—that the ephemeral plans for a new stadium in Ybor City, are dead.
Not only was the proposal more flawed than diamonds sold on E-bay,
Sternberg was reportedly spooked by associating himself with self-enriching
land barons connected to county government cronies.
The Rays owner, a New York
resident with no real ties to Tampa Bay, then issued this outlandish statement:
“We’ll continue to look in
Tampa Bay and we’ll put our efforts to that,” Sternberg said at a news
conference during the winter meetings. “One way or another, we need to figure
out where the team is going to be in 2028, if not sooner. Ideally sooner. But
absolutely by 2028.”
Don’t buy it. He
knows he will find the best deal elsewhere from cities starving for a MLB
franchise that won’t be as attendance-challenged as at Tropicana Field, or very
likely, any Tampa Bay location.
For decades, the four major
professional sports leagues have shunned Vegas, the world’s number one gambling
mecca. That longtime barrier has fallen with a gigantic thud.
The city is home to the
second-year NHL Las Vegas Golden Knights and, along with the state of Nevada,
is building a $1.5 billion stadium for the relocation of the NFL’s Oakland
Raiders in two years. The NBA’s Phoenix Suns, unhappy with ancient
American Airlines Arena, are leveraging a move to Las Vegas to gain a new
facility in the Valley of the Sun. In November, Major League Baseball
named MGM Resorts as its first official gambling partner.
The convergence of events
is stunning.
There is rampant
speculation that the Vegas stadium will be built on the site of the Rio
All-Suites Hotel and Casino, owned by Caesars Entertainment, on Flamingo
Boulevard. This would have been heart breaking a dozen or so years ago
but the property has been on a downhill slide. At least I’ll always have
the memory of assisting Teller with a card trick.
What makes the rumors so
believable is that Sin City would be hard pressed to find a better location.
In my mind, it is perfect.
The Rio sits on more than
100 acres and is 1.2 miles from Las Vegas Boulevard—The Strip. Close
enough but not too close to bottleneck the main drag any more than it is now.
Tropicana Field, home of the Rays for the time being, sits on 85 acres.
Six-lane Flamingo Road can
handle the traffic and it is traversed by Interstate-15. The cross
streets surrounding the Rio are more than adequate. The hotel runs a
shuttle to the strip, similar to the one operated between Tropicana
Field-downtown St. Pete. That’s easily replicated if the Rio site becomes home
to the Las Vegas Rays. City buses also serve the property.
Intersate-15 is .6 miles
from the projected stadium site. Vegas insiders are betting that
demolition of the Rio is impending. Land in proximity to the property is
being snapped up by speculators.
Portland has pined for
major league baseball for years but, unlike the city 762 miles to the
southeast, it’s angling for the Rays with more humility.
John Canzano of the
Oregonian, following the Ybor City debacle, wrote that Portland’s movers and
shakers should “operate with caution and humility, and great care.”
That’s the Portland way.
Spearheading Portland’s
effort to land a MLB franchise is a group known as the Portland Diamond
Project. The PDP has garnered land rights, political support, and
allegedly, the blessing of MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred.
”Tampa fell flat on its face,”
Canzano wrote, “it didn’t just blink, it shut its eyes.” He added that Portland
is, by far, he best city for relocation. Homer.
The scribe is already
concocting nicknames for the team. “Rays” would belie Portland’s reputation for
wet weather. His suggestions: Mavericks, Pioneers, Steelhead. Meh!
The loser in the Rays derby
can afford to be patient. The Oakland Athletics are nursing stadium
and attendance woes with no solutions on the horizon.Cross Posted with permission from: Tampa Bay Beat
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contributed by Tampa Bay Beat. The views and opinions expressed in this post
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