Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/10/2...#ixzz133DfqiSN
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"3,000 additional high priced seats near the field"
Err, okay, so people who cannot afford such seating have an incentive to support this..why?
Higher ticket prices, dubious benefits for "joe average fan", how these new stadium proposals pass is beyond me.
Now "if" they were to build a new stadium, Orange Bowl II..then sure.MikeHoncho, DolfanJake and djphinfan like this. -
dolfan22 likes this.
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AFAIK, the effort was to cost 450 million? -
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MikeHoncho and DolfanJake like this.
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So basically, not much will change on the football front save for ticket prices, the seats will be in the same area, if not further back from the field, only now Ross can hold Super Bowls and WC events..oh joy.Coral Reefer likes this. -
JRS was built in '88
Marlins will separate
Time to build the Dolphins their own stadium -
And field level seats are already some of the most expensive. You want the front row at the 50 yard line? Pay up. It’s like that everywhere. Nothing unique or different about it.
Loria lied, but the public money that went to the Marlins’ new ballpark was allocated by a 2004 public vote that set aside funds for restoration of downtown Miami. The ballpark is part of that package. The holdup since 2004 was the location, the possibility of the state government contributing money, and how much money would be spent by all involved parties.
This is a terrible time for the Dolphins to push for public renovation funding. Huizenga spent a couple hundred million renovating the stadium before he sold the team, and the Marlins got their money because it had already been voted on in a better economy. The Dolphins are either going to have to scale back their plans (and thus the amount of money they need), fund it privately, or a mix of both.
I’ll believe that Miami will be dropped from serious Super Bowl consideration when I see the committee reject multiple bids in a row. They’re handing out Super Bowls to new stadiums, and New Giants Stadium is the most recent project. No other new stadiums are in the works, so let’s see what happens with the 2015 bidding.SICK likes this. -
by the time is all said and done, they will have paid 1 billion for a stadium that is 25 yrs old and lacks the amneties of the Jerruh's mausoleum, sooner or later they will realize that building additions on the mill house just no longer works.Killerphins likes this. -
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I wonder if that 400 million (or whatever it is) would build a new stadium?
Which bring up another point, JRS is the ONLY privately funded stadium in the NFL, Ross owns it like he owns a condo, will the taxpayers own a piece of JRS or ??? -
The avg. worker that is going to have his taxes pay for millions of dollars for a field of millionaires hired by billionaires to play a game?
Ross should fund it with the help of the big business in the area that will be the ones that really benefit from this project.
It's ridiculous for the public to continue to pay for these things when we cant fund so many other things.steveincolorado likes this. -
I don't see the logic in this at all. -
Also you'll notice that World Cup soccer is mentioned again. :pity:
That is the exact reason the seats were built so far from the field to begin with. Tells me that there are NO plans to move seats closer to the field even if it was possible.
The stadium will still be a pig, just with lipstick now. -
The exterior, walkways, ramps, lounges, bars and the club level areas (not the actual seats) are all fine and can stay the same for years. -
Interesting read. I hope the FishBowl comes out well. Since they are asking for ideas and improvements to the stadium, let me offer mine. Put a large statue outside the stadium that looks like this:
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Sorry, man, this is a confusing-*** city.....Dolphins, Porpoises, Marlins, Fish Bowls, Orange Bowls, Reggie Robbie's stadium, whatever. It's almost time to line up and play football, thank God. Most NFL fan bases are kinda fun to pick on, but I feel sorry for your fan base, I really do. -
pass the fees onto businesses, since they will be the ones to benefit most
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Plus, the closer seats only help improve our home field advantage... -
But I think its double insulting to ask the public in Miami-Dade to pay for this. We already have been subsidizing the Miami -Dolphins for over 20 years, EVERY TAX YEAR. Joe Robbie, brillaintly got a privately financed stadium to be built on land he leased from the county (meaning its public property) - literally 160 acres - for $1 a year. Yes 160 acres of land being rented by the Dolphins for $ 1 a year. How many millions of $$$ have the Dolphins been saving through the years instead of paying their fair share of property taxes ? Why haven't they been saving the money they SHOULD have paid in taxes to pay for this upgrade ?
I think the Dolphins have gotten more than their share of tax breaks and use to public tax subsidies through 23 years to pay for their own private stadium upgrades. A stadium where they have yet to ever share in any of that revenue directly to pay off that tax subsidy.
This is disgusting. Pay for it yourself Ross, or sell the team and stadium - or START PAYING YOUR FAIR SHARE OF POPERTY TAXES ! -
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steveincolorado likes this.
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They need to scrap the idea of renovating the 8th(?) oldest stadium. bulldoze it and rebuild!
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Lets bail out the rich
The real estate portfolio of his company is now valued in excess of $15 billion and Ross himself has a personal net worth, according to Forbes magazine, of $4.5 billion.
Yet he needs our welfare...get realCoral Reefer likes this. -
I don't buy that we need a roof to attract Super Bowls.
Tampa doesn't have a roof either, neither does San Diego.
The NFL is also trying to shake down San Diego to build a new stadium for the same reason.
Are they going to eliminate Miami, Tampa and San Diego from the current SB rotation?
I doubt it.Coral Reefer likes this. -
See here is the topic I enjoy because I am a sport management major and two of my courses this semester are facility design and sport finance. Here are the the questions I have to ask you. 1) Are you willing to pay higher tickets? If we were to build a new stadium the ticket prices would sky rocket. Lets say you want a magnificent building like Dallas, well do you realize they are the most expensive place to see a game, because it cost the average family of four between 600 and 700 hundred dollars.
2) Will you pay a seat license? Many of these new stadiums are making people pay a seat license before they buy season tickets. So now you will have to pay a chunk of money on top of your tickets. Can you swallow that?
3) Where will the extra 200 million come from? If I remember right it is an average of 600 million to build a new stadium. If they can barely raise 400 mil how will they get 600?
4) This isnt a question but you`ll never see OB2. At least as a name. Naming rights can net your team around 7 mil a year. You`re going to need that to fund a large project.
5)A multipurpose venue is big. The staples arena has events booked for 330 something days a year. The more things you can book your place for the more money you will make. Also you want to host events for out of town people, because that brings new money to the local economy -
PLAYERS should have to subsidize stadium cost as well.
That's right players.
These guys get 2/3 of revenue.
They are not employees they are partners/owners themselves.
They conduct their business in stadiums.
Business owners pay for their offices to conduct business so these millionaires should have to subsidize their "office space cost" as well.
The fans get royally REAMED by pro sports these days.