November 28, 2007
Rays hope Bays Ball Stadium concept
is a winner with area & county residents
By Ted
Fleming, Tampa Bay Sports Net
|
Ladies and gentlemen please
Would you bring your attention
to me?
For a feast for your eyes to
see
An explosion of catastrophe
Like nothing you've ever seen
before
Watch closely as I open this
door
Your jaws will be on the floor
After this you'll be begging
for more
Welcome to the show
Please come inside
Ladies and gentlemen
Opening lyrics
from "Ladies and Gentlemen" by Saliva
|
ST. PETERSBURG - Traffic
won't be a problem they say. Neither will the people that
will populate the streets of downtown on game days.
It will be open-air but
fans will be 8-10° cooler than the actual temperature
they say. Quite a feat if you ask me.
Best of all, it is not
going to cost the taxpayers one red cent. I want to see
this one because I live here.
The last time there was
this much buzz in Tampa Bay was 1998 when the Devil Rays
played their first game at Tropicana Field and three years
earlier when baseball commissioner Bud Selig reluctantly
gave Tampa / St. Petersburg a major league franchise.
Now the new owners of
the re-branded team hope they can sell their latest idea,
a new waterfront stadium on a plot of hallowed ground
known as Al Lang Stadium and would like to get the old
okey-dokey in a year's time.
For a decade most people
hardly noticed that St. Petersburg was on the major sports
map, a quick look at the empty seats disguised as fans
made that quite clear. However, Stuart Sternberg and his
merry band of deep pocket-aires have hatched an idea that
on the surface has merit and a very good chance of happening.
But there was an odd dichotomy
on this warm sunsplashed afternoon.
On one hand you had all
the rich and famous talking about erecting what was on
dozens of painter's easels with media
outlets from as far south as Ft. Myers making the drive
up.
The overall cost? A cool
$1 billion which includes the stadium and redeveloping
the site where the Trop now sits.
Ten years and ten days
ago the expansion draft was held and the old yard and
I cannot remember if that same station had anyone present
for the gala. Whatever. They were here now.
On the other side of First
Street South there were the homeless. They have been there
for a week and were set to protest the Republican Presidential
Debate later in the day at the Mahaffey Theater, just
a long poke from National League comeback-player-of-the-year
winner Carlos Pena from Al Lang.
The only thing that covered
them was a swarm of police and held back by steel barriers.
The cost? Some overtime
pay for law enforcement.
You have to wonder about
the timing though. Sternberg has scored big time in the
public relations department since deposing Vince Naimoli
but was this chutzpah or
by design? After all, the debate was for YouTube and the
stadium was for the people, right?
Who was going to dominate
the eleven-o'clock news, Sternberg or Giuliani, the Rays
or Republicans? What about the homeless?
How about the newspapers.
What will be on page one above the fold? The way the proposal
was laid out you would think you want the entire spotlight,
not competition for the headline.
Even so, by an unscientific
head count there seemed to be at least one person from
virtually every outlet from Tampa to Tarpon Springs, St.
Petersburg to Sarasota, Lakeland to Longboat Key, and
beyond. Someone must be paying attention.
The two politicians, Governor
Charlie Crist, who lives just steps from what would be
Bays Ball Stadium, and the city's mayor Rick Baker, both
support the idea. Especially the no out of pocket money
promise from the team.
With the Rays kicking
in a big chunk of the overall cost, added to the sale
of land on 16th Street and 1st Avenue South minus the
$100 million in bonds still remaining, how do you buck
Crist and Baker? Or Sternberg for that matter?
The sketches are breathtaking,
the concept state of the art and eco friendly. No retractable
roof because the designers want no walls between them
and the city. Naimoli built enough of them and this project
understandably tears them all down.
In 1995, MLB Commissioner
Bud Selig looked like he was at a wake when he handed
Phoenix and St. Petersburg keys to the executive baseball
bathroom. Today he was likely in New York giggling at
the prospect of another new all-baseball stadium.
At least his number two,
President & Chief Operating Officer Bob DuPuy, showed
and almost bust a gut trying to hide his glee.
Toward the end, the podium
was packed with the baseball elite and they all had answers
for all the questions. Good ones too.
You came away feeling
that despite all that happening on this day even those
without a place to live would be proud to live in the
city. Sadly, their
future open-air home in another part of the city won't
be a luxurious as the Rays.
Welcome to the show. Please
step inside.