- Joined
- Jan 21, 2016
- Messages
- 2,226
- Reaction Score
- 5,023
I hope you are not actually a lawyer because if you are it shows how the state's bar exam does not weed out those who cannot think clearly.
I hope you are not actually a lawyer because if you are it shows how the state's bar exam does not weed out those who cannot think clearly.
Once again, a few people on the Boneyard are stuck in 1970s-type thinking for the state of Connecticut and for UConn overall. It was this type of thinking that led to Coach Pasq. and Coach Diaco to get hired, and the continual denial of the current situation UConn finds itself in. You guys get all excited about mostly mediocre college recruits coming to UConn, but can't chart a path for UConn to be ranked in the top 30 in the country and eventually getting into a P5 conference.This guy is just the strangest troll we’ve had. No idea why anyone replies.
I’d say there’s a 93% chance of this happening.
CONFIRME_
Don't the Giants and the Jets both play in Met-Life stadium? Talk about proximity!
And on the topic -- that stadium is in New Jersey, so folks living in Westchester County and points north in NY state are relatively close to Hartford. So too are people living in western Mass. And the entire state of CT does not have a pro team of any kind.
I don't see a CT NFL team as a threat to the Patriots, Jets or Giants. I do see it as encouraging more interest in professional football in CT.
And getting a superb football stadium in which UConn can also play will only impress the ACC if we ever have the chance to request membership again.
If it is enclosed, it could be used for UConn basketball, hockey, etc., as well as conventions and musical performances.
What is everyone going to do if the XL Center closes soon?
Jimmy, you especially, a die-hard UConn fan, ought to be sympathetic to my reasoning. You don't have to agree, but it is clear the X L Center is in need of repair. The upgrades don't get done, the building gets knocked down like the Coliseum in New Haven. Also, don't you remember how Louisville impressed the ACC with an expanded football stadium. Is the price tag expensive? Yes. May be $1 billion for the Panthers' purchase and over $1 billion for an enclosed stadium in Hartford. But the other option is UConn will play all basketball home games in Storrs -- the football team at best will spend decades in the AAC (or have a schedule with Central CT) -- and Hartford may be forced to declare bankruptcy. Is that what the Boneyard wants?I can only hope that you’re some lonely loser looking for some internet attention by attempting the lamest troll job ever.
The alternative to that is much worse.
I don't see a CT NFL team as a threat to the Patriots, Jets or Giants. I do see it as encouraging more interest in professional football in CT.
... And getting a superb football stadium in which UConn can also play will only impress the ACC if we ever have the chance to request membership again.
If it is enclosed, it could be used for UConn basketball, hockey, etc., as well as conventions and musical performances.
What is everyone going to do if the XL Center closes soon?
Remind me who you think is going to foot the $2.0 billion +/- tab for this new enclosed stadium? (projected cost for Raiders new home in Vegas)
Still waiting for the Rams.Where's Scott Grey?
The Patriots stadium lure in '98 was a farce. Kraft was never going to really move the team here - we were always a bargaining chip to get a better deal in the Boston area.
The price is high indeed, but if it is in Hartford, and there is related economic development, it could help bring prosperity back to a once great city.Remind me who you think is going to foot the $2.0 billion +/- tab for this new enclosed stadium? (projected cost for Raiders new home in Vegas)
The price is high indeed, but if it is in Hartford, and there is related economic development, it could help bring prosperity back to a once great city.
Usually, financing for these kinds of projects comes in the form of public/private partnerships. Lest we forget, UConn Storrs is the beneficiary of similar amounts to upgrade the campus.
Here is the Wiki. entry on the Vegas stadium financing:
The financing for the project is expected to come in the form of $750 million in public funding, $500 million from the Raiders, and $650 million lent by Bank of America.[40] The public portion of the funding will come from municipal bonds issued by Clark County, backed by the proceeds of a special tax on hotel rooms in the Las Vegas area, which was initiated in March 2017.[42] The Raiders' contribution is expected to include a $200 million loan from the NFL's stadium upgrade program, $250 million from sales of personal seat licenses at the stadium, and $50 million from cash reserves.[43]
Sounds like all we need to do is to build super-stadium, for NFL/NCAA football, basketball, hockey, and concerts. With a casino, movie theater, shopping outlets and high-speed rail access to NYC/Boston/Springfield. And luxury condos, with dining options and boutiques. Might as well throw in a full-size replica of the Mark Twain house, built entirely out of Legos.
The facility will be so large, it will actually be both CT-riverfront & L.I.Sound waterfront. Don't forget to keep the tribes included and happy. Mortgage the CT taxpayers' future & get it done!
Laugh all you want but if Connecticut doesn't move forward, it will become part of the rust belt where billions of dollars a year will go to pay for welfare, and Hartford can rival Chicago for the most murders in the nation. We can build new prisons for all of the convicts. I can see an empty Aetna HQ, an empty space where the XL Center now stands, and most other businesses leaving for Florida or Boston -- within a few years.
On the other hand, for perhaps about $4 billion, we can turn Hartford into an entertainment, restaurant, convention and sports capital, with Disney and MGM taking part in the city's renaissance. For about the same amount we can upgrade and expand Bradley airport, connect it with downtown Hartford with decent modern rail service, and line the train route with small and medium sized high tech companies that will draw younger IT workers. UConn will be a key asset to make this work, and in the process UConn will become a top 10, research-driven AAU university. The tax revenue will make this work in the long run. I know which one I prefer.