Mr. Conehead said:What about next to the convention center? Can be used for convention events,too, and would help grow that part of the city into an entertainment district.
Mr. Conehead said:What about next to the convention center? Can be used for convention events,too, and would help grow that part of the city into an entertainment district.
People need an attitude adjustment regarding Hartford. It is not a small market. It is a larger market than Indianapolis, for instance. It is simply located between huge markets. Hartford supported the Whalers, it supports multi show concert runs and many other events.
You better believe I have a right to complain if a $500 million dollar arena in Hartford involves any of my taxes. UConn has been worth the $2B investment. I remain skeptical that a state of the art arena, at that cost, will be worth it.The Hartford Business Journal has been giving statistics on how businesses are moving back to Hartford and the office vacancy rate is declining. Also, a tremendous amount of apartment building is going on in the city, an example of which is the Old Bank of America building on main st. Uconn at Hartford will open soon at the old Times building. In addition, there will soon be train service a number of times a day from Hartford to Boston and a Busway service from the other direction. If you put an event on in Hartford, people show up. We need a new state of the art XL center as a centerpiece for the other sporting venues, Convention Center, museums, Infinity Hall and restaurants. We can't be shortsighted and under build. Nobody from Uconn should complain about the cost in taxes when the State is spending 2 BILLION at the Campus.
As far as a New arena on campus there would need to be a major infrastructure improvement. Additional traffic will make getting there and parking even more problematic. I would like it though.This may well be true but the solution would be a new 12,500 seat arena on campus, not a new 16,000 seat arena in downtown Hartford.
A major part of the solution is for Hartford to find a means of increasing foot traffic that does not involve UConn sporting events.
Yet they outdrew the Bruins in the mid 80's. Chicago was dead last in attendance 6 years ago and now they're 1st. Winning cures all. Saying fans didn't support the Whalers is ignorant.Check your facts. Hartford didn't support the Whalers for a long time. From 91 to 95 they were bottom 3 in NHL attendance. In 93/94, they trailed only
Ottawa in attendance and only bumped it up their final year in a toothless attempt to keep a team that was already gone.
Yet they outdrew the Bruins in the mid 80's. Chicago was dead last in attendance 6 years ago and now they're 1st. Winning cures all. Saying fans didn't support the Whalers is ignorant.
Are you a Bruins fan??82/83: Bruins were 11th, Whalers were 19th out of 21 teams.
83/84: Bruins were 15th, Whalers were 18th.
84/85: Bruins were 15th, Whalers were 19th.
85/86: Whalers were 15th, Bruins were 18th
86/87: Whalers were 13th, Bruins were 18th
87/88: Whalers were 13th, Bruins were 16th
88/89: Bruins were 16th, Whalers were 18th
And then the bottom completely fell out of the Whalers fan base. They latched onto a winning bandwagon for a couple years and flamed right out of town. Boston and Chicago are in the original 6. To even mention Whaler attendance with either franchise is ridiculous.
Are you a Bruins fan??
If anything comparing them strengthens my point. Even OG6 fan bases don't show up for losers. We had a fan base that was young and had seen star after star traded or let go. Should the Penguins have moved in the early 2000's? How about moving the Isles and Devils out of the NY area? This is the largest market without a pro franchise and no ownership took advantage of that. With today's revenue sharing and salary cap a team could definitely work with the right people in place.82/83: Bruins were 11th, Whalers were 19th out of 21 teams.
83/84: Bruins were 15th, Whalers were 18th.
84/85: Bruins were 15th, Whalers were 19th.
85/86: Whalers were 15th, Bruins were 18th
86/87: Whalers were 13th, Bruins were 18th
87/88: Whalers were 13th, Bruins were 16th
88/89: Bruins were 16th, Whalers were 18th
And then the bottom completely fell out of the Whalers fan base. They latched onto a winning bandwagon for a couple years and flamed right out of town. Boston and Chicago are in the original 6. To even mention Whaler attendance with either franchise is ridiculous.
As a person who loves cities and mixed use activity, Hartford frankly sucks. It has none of the energy that cities that are coming up fast have. (New Haven - for instance; Providence for sure)
Would a $500m Sports centered development change things? I have not seen that the City has any idea how to create the great things that are going on elsewhere or even aligning with groups that do that well. Look at the LWLP program at the old Coliseum site in NH. Transformative. I have little confidence that Hartford will ever pull that together. I see political crap and same ol'. The history across many US cities is about graft & corruption often. The answer is a Residential Walkable city focused on a demand driver like a large medical center (Yale New Haven again) or an urban University. With great dining and entertainment.
BUT. the staff of the med center has deteriorated in past few years. The reason I've heard is the predictable: who wants to live in NH vs other (Ivy League) towns???
Check your facts. Hartford didn't support the Whalers for a long time. From 91 to 95 they were bottom 3 in NHL attendance. In 93/94, they trailed only
Ottawa in attendance and only bumped it up their final year in a toothless attempt to keep a team that was already gone.
Also Karmanos refused to count the skybox's in the attendance numbers. No franchise had a worst string of ownership than the Whale.The Whalers won one play off series in their NHL existence in Hartford. ONE!! They still averaged close to 14,000 a game in their last season. That is phenomenal support for a crappy product.
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Palatine said:The Whalers won one play off series in their NHL existence in Hartford. ONE!! They still averaged close to 14,000 a game in their last season. That is phenomenal support for a crappy product.
Nah this is the basketball board but but not supporting a bad team isn't exclusive to this market. Name a team and they've had bad stretches of attendance at some point in time.This might come as news but this market doesn't support bad teams.
This is the UConn football board right? You couldn't fill the HCC with the crowds that saw the end of the season at Rentschler.
The NHL isn't coming back so it's not worth worrying about but it's a better market than some cities that have teams. Not a ton of them, but some.
Nah this is the basketball board but but not supporting a bad team isn't exclusive to this market. Name a team and they've had bad stretches of attendance at some point in time.
MattMang23 said:Forgot where I saw it in this thread, but yes, the arena should be near the convention center. In fact, it should BE the convention center. That center was a mistake. The arena should have been built there, or at least an arena/convention center one on top of the other, akin to MSG's arena/theater setup. The parking garage next door is fine, but could have added a few extra levels to accommodate arena parking. And the proximity to the highway is perfect.