aqib
Registered User
- Feb 13, 2012
- 5,541
- 1,585
The Mets and Yankees are 12 miles apart.#1 - I agree with that "every dollar you get is one we don't get anymore" is NOT reality, but it IS the asking price/point of view of the teams who hold territorial rights. It's opportunity lost for those teams. It doesn't matter that they really aren't getting those fan dollars now, it's that they for sure never will if there's a team in Hamilton, so that's what they want to be compensated on.
#2 - Those numbers are "made up" as (a) an example to show the 2.5 to 3x multiplier for first and second owner, which was the real point.
The second piece of that is the NHL isn't going to open that can of worms unless it's a huge payday for them. Be pragmatic: the details and methodology of my post aren't important at all; the principle is why Hamilton is always a long-shot to ever get a team.
Everyone once in a while, someone will mention that New York should have a third baseball team -- or specifically New Jersey should have a MLB team -- instead of someone like Utah or Vegas getting a team. But it's instantly dismissed as impossible because 98% of baseball fans know the Yankees, Mets and Phillies would never go along with it. (FYI - The Mets exist over the Yankees' objections because the AL/NL had bicameral rules that allowed the AL to vote 7-1 to allow the Mets if the NL voted 7-1 to allow the Angels; those rules are gone now).
But with Hamilton, we have huge arguments because there's some kind of narrative that it's nationalistic reasons and not just pure capitalism reasons.
The people act as if Hamilton is a suburb of Toronto like Long Island and New Jersey are of New York. Then you have Kitchener and Waterloo. Where you can't access Toronto easily for a weeknight game.
Also you ignore just how much that part of Ontario is growing both in population numbers and economically