Frank E said:
It capitalizes on the available market and entertainment dollars. It turns those casual Saturday night hockey fans into season ticket holders and their kids into sweater buyers. Yes, that generates revenue. I've argued this point before, the NHL competes with a lot more than just other NHL teams...it competes for local entertainment dollars.
And nobody in Quebec City is a Habs fan? They don't buy Centre Ice? There are a ton of people who see hockey being broadcast 24/7 on Sportsnet and don't watch but would throw down thousands of dollars on season tickets? A lot of that revenue is just out of one pocket and into another.
Frank E said:
Road draws? Well, I guess that'll take some time with any new team.
So 25 years for Ottawa isn't enough time? Almost 40 years for Edmonton?
Frank E said:
Do you want me to put a number on this? Are you serious? You think that every entertainment dollar available to the NHL in Quebec City has been exhausted because there's another team 2-3 hours away?
No. Not every dollar. But the amount of new dollars in Quebec isn't all that robust. Especially not when compared to a potential American success story like Seattle or Portland or Milwaukee.
Frank E said:
That's a very sweeping statement. I say you're wrong. So does Quebecor and the City of Quebec who just put hundreds of million dollars on the line.
Man, it's a good thing cities have never made poor financial decisions when it comes to sports franchises then.
But again, I'm not saying this won't be good for the people who own the team in Quebec. I just doubt it's benefit to the NHL as a whole.
Frank E said:
Is that right? Which bids from cities in Canada have been turned down? The Canadian teams generate a disproportionate 30+% of league revenues on 7 teams.
Sure. Chiefly based on the teams in gigantic market places with long established fanbases like Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. Using those as arguments for Quebec City as a future economic powerhouse is as deluded as saying that because a team in New York City makes a ton of money, a team in Rochester will as well.
Don't be obtuse. I'm not looking at the bigger market Canadian teams here. I'm looking at teams like Ottawa and Winnipeg and similar markets that have struggled to generate the sorts of revenues you're talking about.
Frank E said:
Well, attracting new fans is great and all, but capitalizing on current ones is just as important. And again, putting another team in Quebec will create more hockey fans than there are there today.
Says who? You? Hockey is pretty deeply ingrained in this country and nobody struggles for exposure to it. I'm pretty sure this country has done a pretty good job of producing hockey fans even in cities where there is no team NHL team. I'm guessing if I walk into a bar in Victoria or Saskatoon or Halifax, I might find some hockey fans.
Frank E said:
I don't know, adding another $150 million per year worth of revenue does something for their business. And there is no trade-off here, it's not Quebec or Kansas City...Kansas City can't make a business case for an NHL team at this point, but Quebec can. I'm sure the NHL would love to see expansion applications from bigger US markets, but there just doesn't seem to be an appetite...and even then, I'd argue that maybe the league doesn't want another Arizona or Atlanta issue on their hands, even if going there is the "best way to grow the fanbase."
That 150 million number is pulled completely out of nowhere and isn't anywhere close to being realistic. Forbes only had 6 teams last year generating that kind of revenue: Toronto, New York, Montreal, Vancouver, Chicago and Boston. Imagining that Quebec City will join those ranks isn't just naive, it's delusional.
Smaller Canadian markets like Ottawa and Edmonton are, according to Forbes, around 115-120 million in revenue and Winnipeg, which is probably the best comparable here, was at 102 million. So at best you're exagerating by 20%, more realistically you're at a third.
Quebec City isn't Winnipeg either, with a pretty large swath of territory that doesn't already have a NHL team people root for. Canadiens fandom is pretty deeply ingrained in Quebec. A New Nordiques would face a lot of the same challenges that the old Nordiques faced in terms of asking people to put their already established allegiances on hold to watch a new team. The Jets could come into Winnipeg and immediately be all of Manitoba's team for TV purposes and probably have a ton of appeal all over the prairies. Where would Quebec City's reach end? How many Montrealers would become Nordique fans? What's their TV market outside of people who would go to games?
You can't pretend like the league hasn't generally been indifferent to the idea of putting a second team in Southern Ontario for exactly these reasons. You're selling ice to people who live with a ton of ice outside.
Frank E said:
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying here....If you own an NHL franchise, you should probably care about the league putting teams in markets that they can be profitable in. Your franchise value depends on it.
If I'm a NHL owner, I care far more about my ability to be profitable than I do about an expansion team's and adding a mid-level revenue generating team in Canada does nothing for the franchise value in Miami or Raleigh while splitting the pie. It won't drive the TV deals. They won't be a good draw for national TV numbers if they make the finals.
Nobody is going to look more favourably on buying a team in one of those markets if Quebec City is in the league. What would be the rationale?