I'm definitely not putting Indianapolis on the list of likely destinations for an eventual NHL team, but those are some pretty fat radii. Here's the same map with 100km radii and all of a sudden it looks like we're filling a gap instead of overlapping:
I can't speak for Kev or what the thought was behind the wide radii, but it may be more of an indicator of secondary market fans?
DING! If you look in the "pockets" created by using
@Montrealer 's map -- Which, props on using a better tool that I did. The color coding?! Chef's kiss! -- the cities not in a circle:
Champaign, Bloomington/Normal IL, Peoria, Fort Wayne, West Lafayette, Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, borderline Dayton, South Bend, etc... The hockey fans living there... whom do you think they're rooting for currently? How likely are they to switch to Indy?
Inside Indiana south of West Lafayette? Sure. Like all WL, Muncie, Bloomington IN, Evansville, absolutely. Gary & South Bend are probably sticking with Chicago.
I lived in Dayton, we got the Jackets and Cavs on TV, not the Pacers. It's gonna depend on where they draw the TV map on in Kentucky for who gets Louisville.
For sure, it's just one of those things that is difficult to account for because it involves a lot of extrapolation and assumptions. Using the radius Kev used (150mi I believe) using Ottawa and Montreal means a ton of overlap, for instance.
Right, but I think that explains a lot when you look at say, who's rich combined with who was there first. Or look at the difference in finances between Ottawa and Edmonton and Calgary.
Ottawa's the biggest of the three and the poorest of the three. EDM/CAL share overlap, Ottawa itself is inside Montreal's 150 mile radius.
It takes generations for teams to put down roots. If you "grew up" an Ottawa Senators fan, you're probably not over 40. Ottawa's "favorite NHL team by age" demographics are gonna be a lot of Habs fans 40+