Jump to content

bosrs1

Members
  • Posts

    4,950
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by bosrs1

  1. An interesting point raised in the Sharks article: Golden State will soon vacate Oracle in Oakland, and the Kings will soon have a new arena.

    So if this "2 teams, 1 arena" stuff doesnt work out or the novelty wears off after a couple years, there might be nearby options available.

    And Sharks Ice in San Jose where the NHL team practices is planning to build a small arena on site as well which could also host the little Sharks if neither of those two options pans out. On top of that the new SF arena probably would be an option to consider as well. Plenty of places the Sharks AHL team could ultimately land. SAP center is hopefully a temporary option.

    And I agree that whomever stated that it sucks that Worcester is losing their team not even to another minor league town does suck. And unlike Norfolk or Manchester who are getting ECHL teams to replace their lost AHL teams, the Sharks don't have an ECHL team to move into Worcester. Only consolation seems to be that the Bruins may be exploring moving their ECHL team there instead so they'll have local affiliated puck in place of the WorSharks even if lower level.

  2. Taste and refinement are far from what I think of when I think of the Padres' hideous 70s look.

    Glad I'm not the only one who thinks this way. The early 80s uniforms though, were pretty solid looking. I' m starting to love them.

    How early in the '80's are you referring? '85 I might agree with. Anything with the 3 color taco bell cap was just blah. Better than some of the mid-late 70's looks I'll grant you, but still garbage.

    So nothing for Lake Elsinore?

    Nada. I was there for a short while and it was just a big after-party hosted by them and Brandiose, nothing really going on business-wise.

    Not sure why anyone would expect Lake Elsinore to make any changes. Aren't they still one of the top selling MiLB logos and caps? That and it's just a good look anyway.

  3. I think I've done this before, but I enjoy it none the less...

    MLB:

    San Diego Padres - I live in SD so they're my local team and fell in love with them and their ballpark when I moved here. Organization in particular treats fans and season ticket holders right for the most part which I appreciated too even if their brand of baseball isn't always the best. I spend more time reading, writing or watching them than any other team both currently or in my life. If I had to pick just one team in any sport, they'd be it. They completely hooked me.

    Oakland Athletics - My childhood team who were also my "local" team growing up in the South Bay. My parents introduced me to them having abandoned the Red Sox after the Buckner Boot (as my dad puts it, "that was the last straw") and they remain fans to this day. We weren't big on San Francisco as a family so the Giants were never an option. Today I consider them my "other" team and it works out since they're AL and rarely play the Padres.

    MiLB:

    Lake Elsinore Storm - Closest MiLB team and Padres long time affiliate in High Single A. I have always enjoyed MiLB games but I was never a big fan of any team until the Storm because growing up the local affiliate in San Jose was tied to the hated Giants. Always a good time when I visit the Storm's stadium (and cheap). Also follow them via internet radio. In fact they were my soundtrack most evenings when I was out jogging this summer on the MiLB app.

    NHL:

    San Jose Sharks - They were the brand new local team when I was growing up and my first exposure to hockey. Went to games then and still follow them from afar to this day which has become very easy thanks to the internet and NBCSN. Still drive up to LA and Anaheim to see them when I can.

    MLS:

    San Jose Earthquakes - Local team growing up who I was passively interested in until they shut down in 2005. Got big into the effort to bring them back to the league in 2006-7 and became a much better fan as a result when they returned to play in 2008. Still go up to LA to take in games when they're down my way and/or fly up to take in the occasional game in San Jose. Also follow them from afar thanks to the web.

    NFL:

    New England Patriots - Grew up in the Bay Area when the Raiders were thankfully gone, and as mentioned SF teams just weren't on the menu. So I gravitated toward my Boston area grandparents team as I developed an interest in football in the 90's. It's something my east coast relatives and I bond over since my immediate California based family loathes the Pats. Strangely I've never been to a Pats home game until this December, but I've been to plenty of away games in the Bay Area and San Diego.

    San Diego Chargers - I hesitate to call myself a fan of the Bolts, but they're so pervasive on San Diego TV and radio and among my friends and family in San Diego that I can't help but stay abreast of what they're doing. Been to plenty of games, usually when tickets are dirt cheap on Stubhub. Of all the teams on this list however they'd likely be the one I'd lose interest in if I ever moved to a different city.

    NBA:

    Los Angeles Clippers - My most recent team acquisition. I didn't really care about basketball until college, and then I became a Kings fan through a Sacramento native friend. However I was never as invested in the Kings as my other teams in part because they were hard to follow in the Bay Area. And during the latter Maloof years it got even worse until they drove me away completely when they announced they were selling the team to Seattle interests. By then I was living in San Diego and I gravitated toward the closest team to fill the void (and San Diego's former team) who were also on local San Diego TV and becoming interesting to watch. Have made the trip up to Staples to see them a couple of times and it was fun, if pricey and getting pricier as they get better and the Lakers tank.

    NCAA Basketball:

    Santa Clara Broncos - My alma mater's team who are easy to follow on the web.

    San Diego State Aztecs - Fell in with them through friends and again pervasive presence in the San Diego media. That and they're easily San Diego's sporting high water mark so they're very fun to watch especially in person. Crowds are very passionate and they suck you in.

    NCAA Football:

    California Bears - With 2 parents who never went to college and having gone to a football free school I didn't have any interest in NCAA football until I met my now wife. Her parents are diehard Cal alumni who brought me to my first college game which was an interesting and very different experience from any football game I'd ever been to. Also gives me things to talk about with the in-laws which is always a plus. Also they're strangely on the radio in San Diego for reasons I've yet to figure out.

    NCAA Baseball:

    San Diego State Aztecs - Discovered their games one lazy afternoon and love going to this day. Didn't hurt that their coach was the late great Tony Gwynn. He was as interesting to watch as a coach as he had been a player. Just a fun, affordable time at their quaint little ballpark on Montezuma Mesa. Also very easy to follow on the web.

    CFL:

    BC Lions - Discovered them on my first trip to Vancouver and have been following as best I could ever since. ESPN3 has made it very easy in the last few years with almost every game being broadcast. If I'm honest I like the CFL style of play better than NCAA or NFL and I never stop trying to sell others on the northern game's virtues (or trying to get them to watch it).

    Other:

    Club Tijuana Xolos - As close to a local soccer team as you'll find in San Diego. They're often on TV or ESPN3 for me to follow plus they play a couple friendlies north of the border every year which I always go to and have a great time. One of these days I want to get down to TJ and take in a game if I can ever find my passport. The fans I've talked to say it's quite the experience, almost a hybrid of visiting an NFL game and a typical Liga MX game.

    AFC Wimbledon - Became a follower of theirs after I heard their creation story and the sorry tale of Wimbledon FC's demise. It resonated with me as a Quakes fan who has similarly lost my team only to have it come back in a new form. That and their early meteoric rise back to the League was damned fun to watch. Plus I love having an English team I follow that isn't the typical answer when someone asks, like Man U or one of the other biggies.

    Yomiuri Giants - My old man got me a Yomiuri cap from a business trip to Japan as a little kid and I was enamored with the strange baseball team that wasn't in the US. Helps that they win a lot too. As an adult the irony of my favorite Japanese team sharing a name with my least favorite American sports team was also not lost on me. Only team I've ever stayed up until 5am to watch play, and win, a championship series on a pixelated and likely illegal feed web feed.

    Surprise Saguaros - Being a Padres fan I'm usually starved for baseball I care about in October and November and I fill that need by following the Arizona Fall League religiously. I always gravitate toward whomever is the Padres affiliate that year. Until this year it was the Peoria Javelinas as the Javs normally play at the Pads spring training complex, but due to construction in Peoria the Pads switched affiliation to Surprise for 2014. I suspect they'll be switching back in 2015 after construction is completed at which time my allegiance will transfer back. They're hard to follow except on rare nights the games are broadcast on internet radio or internet TV.

  4. Starting to remind me of hockey's answer to Chivas USA over in MLS. Two teams that try to put on a brave front but the reality is that no one seems to care.

    Say what you will about the Coyotes woes, but people in power with the city, league and even some half assed ownership groups seem to have always cared. Not to mention their vocal minority of fans who have clung on and continue to spout hope despite years of evidence to the contrary.

    With Florida it seems more like Chivas in that no one really seems to care. Not even the fans. They seem to know they're in a terrible spot.

  5. The merger does not make the AHL move more or less likely. Indeed, adding some of the CHL teams helps bridge the gap between the two (particularly as those are the stronger/viable organizations.)

    Brampton probably dies in a year or two though.

    Oh that's a given that they don't necessarily impact the other. But they are two separate moves that are rocking the lower levels of hockey albiet separately. The AHL move will come non-the-less it seems.

  6. If they lost $24 million over the last year, then they're the worst businessmen of all time and should never be allowed around legal tender again. The organization actually seemed to function relatively well. . .

    ugh NEVER MIND

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/shoalts-new-lifeline-could-keep-coyotes-from-changing-hands/article20906156/

    The problem for the latest owners is the same as it was for all the previous owners – despite any claims to a successful first year, the Coyotes’ cash flow is not enough to service the franchise’s enormous debt. The team’s hockey-related revenue (HRR) for the 2013-14 season was said to be just $40-million, last among the NHL’s 30 clubs.

    They spent $62 million on major-league payroll alone last year without taking any other expenses (coaches, office staff, travel, lodging, debt service) into account. The napkin math is looking bleak here.

    They're a money sink. They always will be. Between the debt and crappy location they've been dead team walking since the day they broke ground in Glendale.

  7. If they lost $24 million over the last year, then they're the worst businessmen of all time and should never be allowed around legal tender again. The organization actually seemed to function relatively well, though they did fail miserably at the whole arena-management thing for which they are paid handsomely because I'm pretty sure they still only had a small handful of non-hockey events.

    I think that's the problem, and always has been, even functioning well the Coyotes are a money sink. It's just not destined to work in Glendale (if not Phoenix as a whole). All of these ownership moves just seem poised to delay the inevitable.

  8. Remember, IceArizona owns little of the team themselves. Most of the money for the purchase came from the NHL and an investment bank. Given that Count seems to have brokered this deal to get Barroway off Charles Wang's ass, I'm guessing it concerns the league's ongoing stake in the team more than Gosbee and the assorted Alberta pretenders. Maybe they used this money to pay the NHL back. Who knows. It has to be more complicated than flipping a team in one year and getting a huge ROI.

    If they lost $24 million over the last year... aren't they halfway to the $50 million barrier before we're back into relocation mode?

  9. 8AF3qRv.jpg

    The RiverCats are now a Giants farm club; I have long thought the Cats should adopt its parent clubs' colors (no matter what they are). Fans of teams often buy minor league gear, especially so if they have the same colors - that way they can blend in at a ballgame and look cool because they are showing support for the farm club too.

    Anyway, I would love to see this logo soon. I'd buy it. Even as a Sacramento resident, and Giants fan, and Cats fan, I'm not sure I'd buy their gear. I'd more likely buy Giants gear and wear that to the game.

    Cats have already said they won't be modifying their logos or identity based on the new affiliation.

  10. Spoke with a player who will be attending a CHL camp:

    "I was informed that the ECHL and CHL are merging. Apparently the CHL camps are being moved up. I don't know if (my team) is or not."

    I put a call in to the GM of the team, and when he returns it, I'll know more.

    Be sure to ask them if its this season or next...

  11. I'm going to bump this up with some new news.

    I spoke today to the head coach/GM of an SPHL team, and he said that they are bracing for a merger between the Central League and the East Coast League. The new league, still known as the ECHL, will be comprised of 30 teams, and is supposed to begin play this season.

    The hockey hierarchy would look like this:

    NHL

    AHL

    ECHL

    SPHL

    FHL, LNAH

    EDIT: And for the people wondering where the OP got his info/theories, look no further.

    http://www.sbnation.com/nhl/2014/8/7/5976075/ahl-west-echl-chl-realignment-minor-league-hockey

    Wait, so if they're going to merge this year what does that mean for the team alignments for this season in ECHL?

  12. So the original logo set was blue & green, the hats are tan & brown, did they not go with that other logo??

    Who knows with a fly by night operation like that. They could still be using both. Assuming of course there is even a team. I've yet to see any other confirmation of the league they claim they'll be a part of other than what the Desert Ghosts themselves have released regarding the Western Association.

  13. Ballpark Business is reporting that the Nogales Desert Ghosts of the all-but-defunct independent American West Baseball League have apparently been resurrected as the Yuma Desert Ghosts of the proposed indy Western Association of Professional Baseball. Flynnagain Productions is responsible for designing the team's new logo package.

    yuma-desert-ghosts-logos-by-flynagain.jp

    http://ballparkbiz.wordpress.com/2013/12/31/nogales-desert-ghosts-and-new-league-take-on-yuma/

    Still not sure what league they're playing in, or if they'll ever play a game, but the Yuma Desert Ghosts have started trickling out their uniform design starting with their home and away caps.

    BceQKMuIcAAO7AO.jpg

    BceQPSGIgAAdlH7.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.