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Brian in Boston

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Everything posted by Brian in Boston

  1. The USL Championship's Charlotte Independence are playing out of the newly-renovated Memorial Stadium. The same circuit's Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC moved into newly-constructed Weidner Field this season.
  2. I'm not a fan of the logo's alignment on the helmet. I understand that it references the angled application of the actual franchise's namesake logo image and word mark, but that always struck me as a strange aesthetic choice. I'd apply the logo to the helmets exactly as you elected to display the standalone mark in the graphic above.
  3. As opposed to the pragmatic option, which would be for most schools in the "Group of 5" conferences to honestly assess their football programs and opt to compete in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision.
  4. Seattle Sea Devils strikes me as the best of said identities. Why? One simply doesn't regard the Pacific Northwest as being a hotbed of piracy. Similarly, when one thinks of a significant U.S. Naval presence in the Pacific, Pearl Harbor and San Diego/Coronado are the locales that leap to mind, not Seattle. Finally, given the choice between the fantastical Dragons and Sea Devils brands, the latter just seems to fit Seattle better.
  5. The Winnipeg Goldeyes of the American Association have announced that they and their fans will be moving "Forward Together" in 2022. The first step on that journey is the introduction of a sleek new look to accompany the team's name of 28 seasons. CREST ICON CITY MARK BRANDMARKS Winnipeg Goldeyes: Forward Together
  6. There are barracuda in Southern California waters. Which is why San Diego's Roller Hockey International team was named after the fish.
  7. Hard pass on both. The range of barracuda is tropical to subtropical waters... decidedly not the Pacific Northwest. There are far better piscine identities to grace a Seattle-based sports franchise: Steelheads, Sockeyes, Cutthroats, Chinook. As for the Riders identity, I never understood the love. The name is about as generic as you can get, the logo was a mediocrity, and the color scheme just made me think of the San Diego Padres. It struck me as no better than a middle-of-the-pack identity - at best - in the WLAF. WideRight would have to work some real magic to "make a silk purse out of that sow's ear".
  8. I'd forgotten about the Portland Thunder. Further, now that I think about it, WideRight incorporated the CFL's Texans logo in his identity for the Texas Outlaws. Well, in any event, I'm pulling for the Seattle Sea Devils.
  9. Seattle Sea Devils (Hamburg - NFLE) or Seattle Thunder (Orlando - WLAF) Dallas Texans (San Antonio - CFL) or Dallas Posse (Las Vegas - CFL)
  10. As I slowly scrolled down, I would have bet the house that my reaction was going to fall somewhere between "What are you thinking?" and "Immediate outrage". The reality is, this gets an "Enthusiastic Support" from me. This new color scheme represents a vast improvement. Frankly, in a side-by-side comparison, the powder blue of the old set seems garishly oversaturated to me. To my mind, what balances out the new palette's traditional lighter teal so effectively is the dark teal shade that you've incorporated and the large silver numbers. That said, the TV numbers on the shoulders are a bit muted and I question the necessity of the gulls on the sleeves. Still, the latter two details are by no means deal-breakers in what I consider a terrific update. Kudos, sir!
  11. I was a fan of the boat in this alternate Argonauts logo. In my opinion, the word mark could certainly use work. I could also see swapping out the maple leaf on the sail for the Argos' traditional A. That said, I was always disappointed that this logo wasn't a more prevalent part of the Argonauts' "Boatman" identity package. Now, whether something akin to this boat - albeit, without the word marks and waves - would work as a stand-alone helmet logo for the Argonauts is open to debate. I offer it up simply as a jumping-off point, as I believe it illustrates that the team could certainly center its identity around the visual depiction of a sailing vessel... and one that didn't replace the ship's hull with a football.
  12. To me, this Baltimore alternate logo has always looked like it was lifted from an episode of an Adult Swim series in which a suburban anthropomorphic raven insurance salesman walked in on his wife getting banged by a raccoon plumber.
  13. Man, I just took a stroll down memory lane out here. Good times... goooooood times.
  14. Dissolution, as in the act or process of dismissing, dissolving, ending, or separating an assembly, body, or partnership into component parts. Of course, I'm quite sure that many fans of the Big XII and its member-institutions besides Texas and Oklahoma are feeling mighty disillusioned right now.
  15. The venality surrounding the "revenue sports" in major college athletics - particularly, "big time" college football and basketball - is both an embarrassment and an outrage through and through. That said, there's sadly nothing laughable about it.
  16. #*&% the Southeastern Conference, #*&% Power Five football, and #*&% conference realignment. #*&% the avarice of conference commissioners and university athletic directors, #*&% the egotism of "prestige" coaches and jock-sniffing boosters, and #*&% the ineffectual effort of NCAA officials and so-called university "leaders". In short, #*&% "big time college athletics". A plague o' all their houses.
  17. Bingo! Frankly, the argument can be made that Oakland was lucky to have ever landed major pro sports in the first place. If the ownership group behind the American Football League's planned Minneapolis-based franchise hadn't announced that it was bolting for the NFL just eight months before the upstart league was set to kick-off, AFL leadership wouldn't have been forced to find a replacement market on short notice. Further, Los Angeles Chargers owner Barron Hilton wouldn't have been afforded the opportunity to throw his weight around and insist upon said replacement market being a California city that would provide his team with an in-state rival and help to somewhat reduce his travel expenses. In which case, Oakland doesn't land its first major pro sports franchise. Which means that civic leaders may never become convinced to pursue more teams... and teams on the move may never become convinced that Oakland could support them. By no means was Oakland a "get" market for any major pro sports league in 1960. At the time, the city's population of 367,548 marked it as the 33rd largest municipality in the United States. The only less-populated markets playing host to major pro sports in the AFL, NFL, MLB, NBA, or NHL at the time were Syracuse (NBA's Nationals) and Green Bay (NFL's Packers). The Nationals would relocate to Philadelphia by the start of the NBA's 1963-64 season. As for Green Bay, the city served as an NFL market in 1960 - indeed, continues to survive as an NFL market today - due to the existence of an iron-clad legal agreement dating to 1923 that establishes the Packers as a publicly owned, non-profit entity. Today, Oakland's estimated population according to the U.S. Census Bureau is 424,891... ranking the city as the 46th most populous in the United States. As you point out, it isn't the largest city in its metropolitan area or Nielsen DMA, trailing behind both San Jose (#10 nationally - 1,013,616) and San Francisco (#17 - 866,606). In fact, it's the 8th most populous city in California behind Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Fresno, Sacramento, and Long Beach. Akron, Anderson, and Canton. Dayton, Decatur, and Evansville. Fort Wayne, Hamilton, and Hammond. Hartford, Kenosha, and Louisville. Massilon, Moline, and Muncie. Newark, Omaha, and Orange. Portsmouth, Pottsville, and Providence. Rock Island, Rochester, and Sheboygan. Staten Island, Syracuse, and Tonawanda. Troy, Waterloo, and Worcester. All played host to major pro teams at one time or another. All have seen major pro sports move on. Like each of said cities, Oakland may be a major pro sports municipality that time and circumstance have passed by.
  18. St. Louis has lost four NFL teams, an NHL club, a single MLB franchise, and a pair of NBA teams. The St. Louis All-Stars folded after the 1923 NFL season. The St. Louis Gunners played three games as a replacement for the Cincinnati Reds during the NFL's 1934 season, then promptly suspended operations. The St. Louis Cardinals relocated to Arizona following the NFL's 1987 campaign. The St. Louis Rams returned to Los Angeles after the 2015 NFL season. The NHL's St. Louis Eagles folded following the 1934-35 season. The AL's St. Louis Browns relocated to Baltimore in the wake of the 1953 season. The St. Louis Bombers folded after the 1949-50 NBA season. The St. Louis Hawks relocated to Atlanta following the league's 1967-68 season. And those eight franchise losses don't even take into account the folding of the ABA's Spirits of St. Louis as part of the NBA-ABA merger in 1976 and the relocation of the NASL's St. Louis Stars to Anaheim in the wake of the 1977 season.
  19. #*&% Dave Kaval, #*&% John Fisher, #*&% the A's, and #*&% Major League Baseball. If I'm Oakland Mayor Libby Schaff and the Oakland City Council, I'm telling ownership and management of the Oakland Athletics that they have until 5:00 PM PST on July 30, 2021 to accept the proposed term sheet that the council approved today, or get cracking on finalizing a stadium deal elsewhere. After all, good ol' "Take It or Leave It" Kaval and the A's brass must have a surefire, ironclad, can't miss ballpark deal all sewn up someplace else by now, right? Otherwise, why would they so confidently be holding a "gun" to the collective head of Oakland's municipal leaders and rather cockily demanding, "Approve our term sheet exactly as we've unilaterally drawn it up, or we're 'pulling the trigger' on a relocation."? The A's presented their proposed term sheet and insisted that it be voted upon exactly as presented. So, call their bluff, Oakland. Let's see how quickly a ballpark deal can be finalized in Las Vegas, Henderson, or Summerlin. Or is the new home of the A's going to be located in Charlotte, Montréal, Nashville, Portland, or Vancouver? You know, I hear Michelle Willard with the Greater Sacramento Economic Council is willing to take their call. #*&% 'em.
  20. Underwhelming? It pays homage to the "skating Admiral" logos that the team sported in the 1970s and '80s. It marries a retro vibe reminiscent of said era - indeed, it wouldn't have been out of place in the 1950s or '60s - with a more polished, modern rendering style. It strikes me as being the best logo a hockey team dubbed the Milwaukee Admirals has ever sported, hands down. If the Admirals adopted it as their regular logo, it would - to my mind - be the best primary mark in the AHL. This is some outstanding craftsmanship on Dan Simon's part. I've long been a fan of his work and this is no exception. Frankly, it's one of my favorite sports logos... period. I'd love to get my hands on a jersey!
  21. My problem with this logo... ... is the complete lack of detail on the entirety of the hawk's lower jaw. No mouth line... no lower mandible... no detail whatsoever. Minimalism taken to the extreme. In the photo of the hawk at rest which you shared... ... one can still discern details such as the mouth line, the separation of the upper and lower mandibles, and the feather-covered rear portion of the lower mandible. They're all plainly visible here... While the artist who designed the Winterhawks' alternate logo had every right to design a more minimalist mark, I feel the choice - and its execution - leave something to be desired aesthetically. It strikes me as a bit too stylized. There's something "robotic" about the hawk. Certainly attractive, but not what I'd choose for a team dubbed the Winterhawks.
  22. While a solid logo, this has always struck me as being a depiction of a cyborg hawk from the distant future that was sent back to 21st-century Portland in order to prevent the erasure of major junior hockey in said city from our timeline. "I'll be BEAK."
  23. Had this Portland Winterhawks logo been unveiled yet, or could the team's new mark be hiding in plain sight on their web page?
  24. I can just see the Review-Journal banner headline officially announcing the relocation: Viva LA's Vegas!
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