Tag Archives: St. Pete Times Forum

An Invitation to Jets Fans

My 28-year-old daughter, Betsy, who lives in Orlando, posted this on her Facebook page early Friday evening:

“So Winnipeggers, tickets to the Jets vs. Lightning game in Tampa start at $4.95. Who’s coming with me, Oct, 29th???!!!”

Actually, since Betsy posted her invitation, cheaper seats have appeared on Stub Hub. As of Saturday morning, there was a pair available to the Jets-Lightning game for $4 each. Another pair for $4.50 each. There was even an instant download for a group of eight for $7 each. In other words, you’d have eight tickets downloaded in your hands for $56. That’s nuts.

Here are some of the ladies who have committed:

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Magic fans off to see the Jets.

Just as an aside, I’d go anywhere with them and in this case, I’ve even been given permission.

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Betsy and Becky getting ready to watch the Jets -- for, like, free.

Later in the evening, Betsy added this to her post: “I’ll be buying tickets on Sunday. So I’ll buy as many as we need, I’ll probably go a little more expensive and closer to the action….. Might be $9 lol.”

LOL is right. If you bought a scalper’s ticket to the Jets opener in Winnipeg last Sunday, you probably paid considerably more than it would cost to buy a plane ticket to Orlando, spend a few days at Disney World, rent a car, drive the hour to the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, watch the Jets there for $4 and then fly home.

In fact, on Thursday, Oct. 20, the Lightning play the New York Islanders in Tampa. Tickets on Stub Hub start at $3 lol. Think about that. You can watch two of the greatest young players in the game — John Tavares and Steven Stamkos — play against each other for $3. What? Is it 1970?

The NHL can say what it likes about the Sun Belt experiment, but Stub Hub doesn’t lie. People in the southern markets don’t care about hockey and when you can get a regular season ticket on the secondary market for $4.95 (and it doesn’t matter who the opponent is), it’s time to start moving these teams to Halifax, Quebec City, Kitchener, Regina and even the Kootenays. Or hell, even Kansas City where they have a great new rink, or Omaha where they have a solid college team a good junior club.

Betsy Jets 223x300 An Invitation to Jets Fans

Betsy and her RCS Jets hoodie.

If you’re in a position to watch a great team like the Tampa Bay Lightning — Stamkos, Vincent Lecavalier, Marty St. Louis, Victor Hedman — for $4.95, then you live in a city that hates hockey, will never like hockey and won’t miss it when it’s gone. Because if you don’t like this Tampa Bay Lightning team right now, you obviously hate the game.

Meanwhile, Betsy will look great at the game in her Winnipeg Jets hoodie, purchased right here in Winnipeg from our friends at River City Sports.

Nobody in Tampa, Nobody in Jacksonville and Jason Whitlock Gets it Right Again

TAMPA, Fla. — Sitting in the press box at the St. Pete Times Forum wondering where the hockey fans went…

I remember coming to Lightning games and seeing at least 15,000 people inside this beautiful building in downtown Tampa, cheering and screaming and urging on their hockey heroes.

But not anymore.

Tonight, the Lightning will probably announce a crowd of 13,000 or 14,000, but the reality is, this building is not half full. And the truly sad part is that Alexander Ovechkin and a very good Washington Capitals team is playing a Lightning club that struggles on defence but has every weapon on offence — Marty St. Louis, Vinny Lecavalier, Steven Stamkos and Ryan Malone. If you live in Tampa and you don’t like this Lightning team, you just don’t like hockey.

Of course, it could all just be part of a recession that few people want to admit is seriously affecting professional sports. I was in Jacksonville yesterday as the Jaguars took another step toward an AFC wild card berth with a 23-18 win over Houston, but fewer than 43,000 people were in the  stands. It was the smallest crowd in Jaguars history.

Fact is, if you want to buy tickets to any sporting event in America these days, there are “plenty of good seats available.” My wife just bought a $50 ticket to the Pro Bowl from Ticketmaster. Nobody thought there would be Pro Bowl tickets available if the NFL moved the game from Honolulu to South Florida, but nobody thought the recession would kick the crap out of ticket sales the way it has.

Tonight, here in Tampa, Ovechkin is wheeling all over the rink while Lecavalier had had three great scoring chances in the first period. It’s a good hockey game. But if there are 6,000 people in this building, I’ll eat the seats.

(NOTE: Just watched Ovechkin score his 19th goal of the season on a one-timer after taking a great pass from Alexander Semin. Ovie is worth the price of admission and I can assure you that here in Tampa, the price of admission ain’t much.)

NOTE: There is only one mainstream media reporter who truly understands the Tiger Woods scandal. Read Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star at: http://www.kansascity.com/182/story/1613268.html?storylink=omni_popular.

After reading his column, the rest of the issue is moot.

Real Leafs Fans Have to Go on The Road. And They Make Plenty of Noise.

TAMPA — Tuesday night in Tampa, the Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 4-3 in a shootout at the St. Pete Times Forum, in what was — in a small way — Air Canada Centre South.

Although the players didn’t agree.

 

“The fans here were much louder, cheering for us, than they are at home,” said Leafs defenceman Ian White. “This was one of the best crowds I ever played in front of.”

 

Leafs head coach Ron Wilson said pretty much the same thing.

 

“That was a great crowd,” Wilson said. “A lot louder than we have back in Toronto.”

 

There were almost 19,000 people inside the St. Pete Times Forum (the deal on Tuesday was four beers or sodas, four hot dogs and four tickets for $54), and well over half of them were cheering very, very loudly for the Leafs.

 

In fact, the crowd in Tampa was so pro-Leafs, they even cheered O Canada. Loudly. This was Leaf Nation on the road and it was an impressive sight.

 

The Lightning had a complete sellout for a game between two teams that were already out of the playoffs. Obviously, the Lightning – a team that has struggled to sell tickets this season – would absolutely love it if Ontario had spring break from October until April and their only opponent was the Leafs.

 

Of course, it also demonstrated that real Leafs fans can’t buy affordable tickets in Toronto, but they can get cheap seats on the road. The Toronto fans in Tampa on Tuesday were young, loud and proud and they were treated to a great hockey game (who would have believed that?). The Leafs bounced back from a 3-0 deficit to win. Jason Blake was terrific, Curtis Joseph was a hero in the shootout and John Mitchell scored the winner.

 

One can’t begin to imagine how great the crowds in Toronto would be if the real fans could afford platinum season tickets.

 

Is Gary Bettman Delusional?

Our Question of the Week: Is the Commissioner of the National Hockey League Delusional?

 

In an interview with Fox Sports Arizona on Wednesday night, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said that the Phoenix Coyotes financial problems will be resolved and, indeed, new investors will be coming on board.

 

It was, essentially, the same line he handed to a group of Canadian business leaders earlier in the week. If those business leaders actually believe Mr. Bettman, then we all know why we’ve had a financial meltdown throughout the business community.

 

Although Bettman claimed all be well in Phoenix and that there are all sorts of people just dying to flush their money down a giant toilet known as jobbing.com Arena, he did not explain how new fans would come rushing toward the turnstiles. He did not explain how the team’s lousy arena lease deal would be re-written. He has obviously convinced a rich guy to blow his finances on a failing NHL franchise, but he hasn’t explained to that guy how suddenly fans are going to start showing up in a building that’s barely half full most nights.

 

I mean, come on, Gary, the Coyotes already have a $21.30 All-You-Can-Eat ticket package. You can’t make it much cheaper to attend. And yet, they still aren’t attending in a community where the average wage is $34,000 a year. That’s among the lowest in the United States.

 

How are the Coyotes EVER going to be successful?

 

While the rest of the world struggles with bankruptcies, massive unemployment, economic meltdown and government bail-outs, Gary Bettman believes the NHL is on an economic island unto itself. And he believes this, even though he sees the drop numbers on the announced attendances. I was in Tampa last Tuesday when the announced attendance was 15,912. Sorry, but the St. Pete Times Forum wasn’t half-full. There might have been 15,912 tickets distributed, but barely 8,000 were actually in the building (oh, yeah, and most were wearing Canadiens jerseys). Other than the product on the ice and the attendances in Canada, nothing about the NHL appears real.

 

The man who said, earlier this week, that the NHL’s financials were strong and the future was bright, lives in a world uninhabited by the rest of us.

 

Please Gary, let us into NHL World, where the streets are paved with gold and every team is the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

Super Bowl Week gets Duller: The Conversation is now Down to the Plight of the Lightning.

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 6, Thursday Jan. 29, 2009

 

TAMPA — Tomorrow night in Tampa, the Lightning will play host to the Philadelphia Flyers in a game that is expected to draw about 14,000 ticket buyers to the St. Pete Times Forum. It won’t. There will probably be 10,000 (maybe) in the building.

 

Still, that’s a lot better than Tuesday night of this week when maybe 8,000 showed up to watch the Lightning come from behind and beat Montreal 5-3. 

 

Of the 8,000 in the building, about 5,000 were wearing Canadiens jerseys. No wonder you can get an NHL ticket in this town for 10 bucks. There is nobody going to hockey down here. At least not at NHL rates they aren’t.

 

Super Bowl Week should have helped the NHL draw a big crowd here in Tampa. Instead, it’s done nothing to get people interested in a team that has won six-of-eight and is playing very intriguing hockey these days.

 

The NHL is in bigger trouble than we thought.

 

2) You know you’ve reached the point of “Dull Super Bowl Week” when the biggest story making the rounds is the one where Arizona wideout Larry Fitzgerald will happily restructure his contract to make it possible to keep teammate Anquan Boldin in Arizona for the long term.

 

The NFL controls the words and actions of these players so carefully, that if one of them said anything that could even remotely inspire the opposition, it would be news for a week. In fact, the biggest story here in Tampa this week has been how few people care about the Lightning. 

 

At least Celine Dion, Rihanna, Fall Out Boy, the Eagles and Randy Moss have arrived in town. Finally, got some real celebrities in this place. 

 

3) According to the NFL, despite the downturn in the economy, media from 28 countries will cover all the preparations and game – the most countries ever to be represented at a Super Bowl site.

 

Japan and Mexico have sent the most media organizations to Tampa Bay — 22 outlets apiece. Next comes Canada and the United Kingdom, which are sending 18 media outlets each to Super Bowl XLIII. Including Winnipeg’s own 92-CITI-FM.

 

There will be a total of 141 international media organizations in Tampa this year, compared to 116 for Super Bowl XLII in Arizona last year.

 

However, the number of media credentials issued for the Super Bowl is down for the first time, according to the NFL’s media department. In fact, the NFL said there were fewer requests.

 

Although there are more media outlets receiving credentials than ever before — 633 this year compared to 576 last year — the number of specific credentials requested dropped from 4,786 for last year’s game in Phoenix, Ariz., to 4,589 for Sunday’s game in Tampa.

 

It’s a brave new media world out there. In fact, as newspapers die a slow death, there are more internet sites at the game than ever before.

Fitzgerald Ready: “It’s just like playing at Martin Luther King Park in Minneapolis.”

NFL Super Bowl Report No. 4, Tuesday Jan. 26, 2009

TAMPA — It was Media Day today, the annual Tuesday of Super Bowl week where allegedly serious journalists get all tangled up with the circus freaks from MTV and Nickleodeon. 

 

Fact is, Tuesday of Super Bowl Week is usually a circus and it’s usually great fun.

 

At least, in most other years, it’s been a circus. Today, however, it was eerily subdued. There was one freak from Telemundo who had a five-o’clock shadow and yet dressed like a blonde hooker — wig, cocktail dress, too much makeup, the whole Hallowe’en costume. OK, so he was more like a fat, old hooker and it was truly disgusting, but he was so quiet and he was around so little that he was hardly noticeable. 

 

This year, at the Recession Bowl, most of the talk among the media members has had more to do with when their respective newspapers would fold, not whether Larry Fitzgerald would catch nine more passes for 150 more yards and three more touchdowns on Sunday.

 

In fact, sitting on the bus in front of a couple of New York writers, it sounded as if the end was near for the heavily-indebted New York Times.

 

“I just don’t understand the new business model,” said one 50-ish writer. “You take the product that you used to charge people for, put it on the web and give it away. The people who run this business have absolutely no clue how a business works and now they sit around and wonder what happened.

 

“The Tucson Citizen, the Rocky Mountain News, the Seattle P-I, and more are threatening to go. These papers still make money, but the owners have so much debt service, they can’t make it work.”

 

“It’s just so silly,” said the other 45-ish journo. “The web is a voracious beast. You just feed it and feed it and it’s still hungry. Everyday, we feed it more and more copy and yet it can’t make any money, but we now work harder on the web than we do on the paper. Meanwhile, the core business can’t keep up with its debt financing.

 

“It’s true, editors and publishers are editors and publishers. The concept of business completely eludes them.” 

 

So on Tuesday at Media Day at Super Bowl XLIII, there were plenty of so-called serious journalists, but very few women dressed up like strippers, girls dressed up like trees or vegetables and men dressed up like hookers. There were very few questions like this: “If you were a pizza, what kind of pizza would you be?”

 

“The freaks aren’t here, because very few of us are here,” said Dave Perkins of the Toronto Star. “Every year, there are fewer and fewer of us. They say the business is changing. It’s changing faster than we think.”

 

So on a very interesting Media Day, here are a few interesting responses…

 

1) A little more than a month ago, Mitch Berger was in B.C. kicking a football all by himself. This week, he’s preparing for Super Bowl XLIII. He can’t believe it.

 

“I really thought I’d go when I was in Minnesota in 1998,” Berger said, surrounded by a handful of Canadian media types.

 

“That was a great season. We were 15-1 and Randy Moss was rookie of the year,” Berger said. “I thought that was my one and only chance. Then we got another chance in 2001, but we went into New York and got spanked by the Giants in the NFC Championship.

 

“And that was it. I thought I was done. I was home in B.C., kicking by myself, and nobody called. Not even a CFL team called. I think Winnipeg still has my rights and I thought they might call, they had kicking problems all year, but they didn’t call, so I thought I might have to wait until training camp next year.

 

“Then my agent got a call from the Steelers and now here I am. I’m enjoying Super Bowl Week, my family gets in tomorrow, it’s going to be a great, great time.”

 

Berger owns four restaurants and a bar in Vancouver and Victoria and he’ll never be broke. But to get one more shot at the Super Bowl is just about as good as it gets.

 

2) Larry Fitzgerald Jr. said yesterday that his dad, sportswriter Larry Sr., will be all over him this week. 

 

“But in a good way.”

 

“He’ll tell me to get plenty of rest, to eat right, to stay out of trouble,” said the Cards gifted wideout, a young man on the verge of setting every playoff receiving record in NFL history.  

 

“Having my dad around is great. He’s done so much for me because he allowed me to be a big part of his life. I got to hang around with some of the greatest athletes in history. He’s the reason I’m able to do what I love to do today. When you’re a youth and you see what you want you want to do for the rest of your life and you eventually get to do it, then that’s really living the dream.

 

“Right now, I’m living the dream.”

 

Fitzgerald said that with his dad staying with him in the team hotel, he’s able to take the distractions out of his game.

 

“I look at this game this way: It’s the same game I’ve been playing since I was seven years old at Martin Luther King Park in Minneapolis. Sure it’s the Super Bowl, sure it’s the biggest stage on earth. But it’s the same game I’ve always played. I just need to run my routes, catch the ball and run with it. That’s all it is. It’s just football.”

 

3) Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt, was asked how he turned around a team that played mediocre football down the stretch and finished the regular season at 9-7.

 

Let’s be honest here: The Cards were dreadful in December, but have been unbeatable in January.

 

In fact, as the question was being asked, former Detroit Lions head coach Steve Mariucci — a guy who had a lot of trouble winning football games — wondered aloud whether Whisenhunt had changed the system or delivered a different message.

 

“None of the above,” Whisenhunt said with a smile. “There was nothing tangible that happened. We just got hot at the right time. Nobody gave us a chance in the playoffs so it’s been the us-against-the-world mentality and the guys have bought into it. We’ve done nothing more than get hot at the right time.”

 

Funny, it’s actually starting to feel a little cooler here in Tampa. 

 

Oh, by the way, last night before the Montreal-Tampa NHL game, the duo of Les Sabler (on guitar) and Marshall Gillon (vocals) provided both the Canadian and U.S. national anthems.

 

I have never heard O Canada or the Star Spangled Banner performed better. Outstanding doesn’t even begin to describe how spectacular it was. 

 

Another by the way, no matter what the P.A. announcer told the crowd, the attendance at last night’s game in Tampa, was a lie.

 

The St. Pete Times Forum was not half full for the Habs and Bolts.