It seems like a dollar is worth a lot less than it used to be.
Get it in writing. A Handshake agreement may not be enforceable.
Not a bad ROI.
Professional sports teams seam to be in a bubble market. Revenues are not consistent with value, and they are running out of egotistic billionaires. It will be fun to seem them burst.
The trouble with sports is the ever growing political correctness. People tend to make the same decisions at the same time. You’ll lose a deal breaking amount of customers on almost exactly the same day.
Passively watching sports is going the way of the Do Do Bird.
Maybe this guy will actually try to pay for some talent. Unlike the last 3 owners.
The $634 million stadium was supposed to usher in a new era for the Miami Marlins. In claims similar to those made to justify a new Tampa Bay Rays ballpark, Marlins officials predicted bigger crowds, more revenue and a more competitive team. The lure of a Major League Baseball ballpark would draw development into the low-income, mostly Hispanic neighborhood 2 miles west of downtown Miami.
But after a one-season burst of interest, crowds at Marlins games remain among the smallest in baseball, and the team continues to trade its best players and struggle on the field.
As the Tampa Bay Rays look to leave Tropicana Field, the Marlins experience serves as a warning that a new ballpark is no instant fix for a struggling franchise.
Including new parking garages, the cost to taxpayers for the Marlins plush new home ran to $508 million. Add in the cost of repaying high-interest construction bonds and that figure rises to a jaw-dropping $2.4 billion over 40 years, which led Forbes Magazine to dub it baseballs most expensive stadium disaster.'