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Not a Canadian City but a Canadian team was there. I can't find an image from Wednesday Nights game but they only filled 8500 seats, probably half being Snowbirds. This has to be the worse Baseball park in the entire MLB league. If any city needs a retractable dome it's Tampa. Keep in mind the Rays are doing amazing right now. #1 in the whole MLB.
source: https://library.sportingnews.com https://library.sportingnews.com/202...3mko2xuprm.jpg |
Florida in general is a terrible sports market.
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The Rays wish they drew as well as the Lightning when they played there. (Come to think of it, they wish they drew what the Lightning draw where they play now too lol)
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I'm happy Rogers didn't choose to do that with the dome. They gave it personality but in a way that suits the ballpark. I saw some mockups where people added things such as red-brick facades. Skydome is never going to be that place. |
^ Considering they are of a similar vintage, Skydome has aged way more gracefully than the Suncoast Dome. Although I suspect that the TB owners are kind of poisoning the well the same way that the owners in Oakland did. It's not that hard to maintain a stadium properly if you want to keep it for the long haul... conversely, it's easy to make it look like shit if you want to get someone to build you a new one.
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Winnipeg's new CEBL team started up. They drew a good crowd to their home opener which they won, a lower bowl sellout at Canada Life Centre. I was there and it was a very exciting evening capped off with a win by the home team.
But what the CEBL is doing exceptionally well for a smaller pro league is getting their product out to a mass audience. They have a TSN game of the week, and all games are available on TSN+ (which I access through my smart TV so it's like watching anything else on TV, no computer or tablet fidgeting/casting required). The games are really well done, they have some well known broadcasters like Chuck Swirsky and Rod Black calling games. My son likes the CEBL so he puts the games to keep an eye on what's going on while he does other stuff. But wouldn't you know it, I often become intrigued by the action, and end up sitting down to watch. Sometimes I wonder if smaller leagues get too captivated by the thought of some meager dollars that come their way with obscure streaming services (One Soccer, CHL TV, AHL TV, etc.) instead of chasing a broader audience through a mainstream broadcaster. There has to be a lot of value to the CEBL in having all their games available to anyone with a TSN subscription (which has to be the vast majority of speaking sports fans at least in English Canada, not sure what the RDS situation is). At the same time, good on TSN for giving that kind of exposure to a fledgling Canadian league. https://lirp.cdn-website.com/8d6ff7b...C6102-640w.jpg |
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TSN to Showcase Canadian Elite Basketball League Game of the Week, Tipping Off May 24 Mar 16, 2023 |
^ CBC Gem worked too. The point is that putting games on some obscure streaming service where you charge an extra X dollars to watch is hindering your league's growth in the long run. Maybe a league with an established, devoted following can get away with that, but for something like the CEBL you want as many eyeballs on the product as possible. I think the CPL could stand to take a lesson from how the CEBL is doing it.
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^ I guess there are ultimately degrees of accessibility. Being on OTA TV or a free streaming service like CBC Gem or YouTube provides the maximum potential amount of exposure, but being on a mainstream cable channel like TSN is still a huge amount of exposure in its own right... TSN bills itself as the #1 specialty cable channel, and you would have to imagine that its reach is massive among people who are sports fans and therefore likely to watch a basketball game on TV. Same with SN.
Niche paid streaming services that focus on a single league or even sport have the effect of locking away the product from casual viewers. But it's those casual viewers who might be enticed to buy tickets and attend in person, buy merchandise, etc. I'm not sure how the CEBL finagled such a good arrangement with TSN but I'm sure it will pay off as having their games on TV gives the league a relatively high profile which should translate into more credibility in general. |
I think for the next few years you need a blended approach of both. All in cable is as mentioned here is a dying industry however all in on streaming severely limits number of people who know easily where your product is.
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Another Cable TV Company is Shutting Down its TV Service As Only 10% of Its Customers Pay For TV Luke Bouma cordcutternews June 1, 2023 |
I don't doubt that cable's long term outlook is not good, but certainly at the moment, and at least for the short term it will continue to have a pretty significant presence. Certainly for sports fans. I would imagine that the majority of sports fans in Canada (the kind of person who watches at least a few live games a year) have TSN or SN.
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Cool! I think most Canadians don't know how exciting Basketball is to watch in person. It's probably on par with Hockey for me to see live. |
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If they can secure any of the remaining Ontario teams from the NBLC, with at least the London Lightning and the Windsor Express (as they are the longest-lasting franchises), it will improve their product further. I really do believe that a regional approach will keep this league stable and allow it to grow instead of bleeding money on travel costs. It was disappointing to see the CEBL Growlers suspend operations so soon, but there was no way it was going to work. Introducing Atlantic Canada into the league at this point in time is not sustainable. It has been good to see the western conference fill out with the new Calgary and Winnipeg teams. I am still skeptical of the stability of these teams given the larger travel distances (and therefore higher costs) involved in the western part of our country, but with two new teams, it already looks better. Filling in the distance gaps further with places like Kelowna and Regina should also help with stability in the future. |
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People start to hit the exits. |
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While we're on the topic, Teddy Buckets with the huge record-tying personal performance for the Sea Bears last night... https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fxqs88UXgAAFqEF.png |
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A buddy of mine throws on the odd basketball game so I go over and we have to restart the feed of find a new one most times. |
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http://www.sportsbusinesssims.com/nhl-team-payrolls.htm
NHL Team Payrolls 1989-90 to 2003-04 https://crashingthegoalie.wordpress....ies-1987-1990/ SPORT – June, 1987 1. Wayne Gretzky – Oilers – $950,000 CDN – (converted to $717,250 USD) 2. Marcel Dionne – Rangers – $700,000 3. Mike Bossy – Islanders – $650,000 4. Bryan Trottier – Islanders – $625,000 5. Dave Taylor – Kings – $600,000 6. Mario Lemieux – Penguins – $550,000 5. Denis Potvin – Islanders – $550,000 8. Mike Liut – Whalers – $450,000 9. Rod Langway – Capitals – $400,000 10. Barry Pederson – Canucks – $350,000 SPORT – June, 1989 1. Gretzky – Kings – $2 million 2. Lemieux – Penguins – $1.5 million 3. Trottier – Islanders – $950,000 4. Taylor – Kings – $700,000 5. Dionne – Rangers – $600,000 6. Liut – Whalers – $550,000 7. Goulet – Nordiques – $510,000 8. Messier – Oilers – $510,000 9. Savard – Blackhawks – $500,000 10. Coffey – Penguins – $485,000 11. Duguay – Kings – $475,000 12. Hawerchuk – Jets – $467,500 13. Stastny – Nordiques – $446,250 14. Carpenter – Bruins – $425,000 15. LaFontaine – Islanders – $425,000 16. Gustafsson – Capitals – $410,000 17. Stevens -Capitals – $400,000 18. Pederson – Canucks – $400,000 19. Bourque – Bruins – $380,000 20. Fuhr – Oilers – $340,000 20. Robinson – Canadiens – $340,000 |
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That seems counterproductive these days. |
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CEBL is getting $0 from TSN and paying for production costs. Canada Soccer had similar deal with TSN/SN for 30 years which didn't grow the game to any degree, cost them $1 million/yr and TSN/SN didn't show about 50% of the matches. Despite CEBL being on CBC for the past few years, CPL has 2-100x higher social media engagement across platforms such as twitter, youtube & reddit. Now with Cdn households dropping linear tv subs by 40% in the past decade, the pentration rate has dropped below 50%. It now also skews >55 age group which isn't core audience that will grow soccer in Canada. Soccer demos are also the most likely group of sports fans to stream since paid linear tv never provided adequate coverage. It's why there are about 6 sports streamers in Canada focused on the sport. MLS 1.0 showed catering to casuals or soccer moms didn't work (again) for a North American soccer league. They don't attend enough matches to matter and don't buy kits every year. It's only when they shifted to focusing on existing footy followers including Hispanics that their growth grew materially. And as seen by their Apple TV deal, casuals still don't watch MLS to any large degree but the league has expanded 2x since TFC came into the league. |
^ So where are the results, then? Speaking from my local experience, the CEBL team just showed up in Winnipeg and they have blown away Valour FC in terms of building a profile. There has only been one Sea Bears home game and my son and I can already easily name more Sea Bears players than Valour players. Sea Bears get some discussion time in the paper and on the local sports shows as compared to Valour, which seldom does. Valour did reasonably well in their first season but they have fizzled since then... they are probably roughly on par with the Winnipeg Goldeyes in terms of the mindshare they have among local sports fans. I say this as someone who would like to see the club thrive, but they seem to exist in their own little bubble.
I find it hard to believe that the exposure provided by cable TV doesn't play into this situation. |
Can someone please explain to me why a team in Winnipeg is called the Sea Bears?
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Apparently they're calling their polar bears sea bears as opposed to bay bears. |
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(I honestly thought this was a team that moved from Atlantic Canada.) |
it's truly a dumb name.
The Sea Bears name was chosen in honour of the polar bear, whose Latin name, Ursus maritimus, means "sea bear." Manitoba is known for its polar bears at Hudson Bay. |
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Best guess as to why not simply name the team polar bears is that the name was already trademarked for one reason or another. The polar bear identity was used by the Winnipeg Thunder of the WBL/NBL in the early 90s. Same colours and everything. So I guess Sea Bears just kind of built on that. The old: https://i.etsystatic.com/16103601/r/...82990_elob.jpg The new: https://irp.cdn-website.com/d8d53c44...ears-logos.png |
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But the point is that CEBL's accessibility via TSN gives the Sea Bears a major promotional advantage that the CPL lacks. The CPL is kind of out of sight, out of mind for many. |
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https://3downnation.com/2023/06/06/2...cast-audience/
2023 CFL preseason TV ratings: Riders’ win over Bombers provides worthy TSN broadcast audience TSN chose to cut its 2023 Canadian Football League preseason coverage in half, dropping from four to two television broadcasts. But even that small sample size shows viewers were jonesing for CFL ball. The Saskatchewan Roughriders 28-16 win over the Winnipeg Blue Bombers drew more eyeballs on TV than many regular season games did last year — one tilt in Week 21 last year had less than 200,000 viewers. Clearly, Rider Nation wanted to see Trevor Harris play in green and white for the first time, despite the game not counting in the standings. Harris went four-of-four passing for 72 yards with one touchdown strike to Derel Walker in his only exhibition drive. The performance helped the Riders go 2-0 in the preseason for the first time since 2007. Excitement surrounding the new-look Saskatchewan squad led to a rating over 360,000 on TSN. The other tune-up contest broadcast nationally by TSN was the Alouettes visiting the Redblacks on May 26. Cody Fajardo did not play in the game but it still attracted more than 275,000 viewers on TSN and RDS combined. Fajardo put on Als colours for the first time in Montreal’s last preseason tilt, which was aired exclusively on RDS, TSN’s French-language affiliate, and produced a respectable viewing audience. Every other preseason game was streamed by the league on its CFL+ platform as radio calls were synced with the moving pictures for most of the matchups. The product was solid but it was not up to the standard of a regular TSN broadcast. CFL preseason TV ratings 2023: Week 1: Montreal vs. Ottawa — 275,900 (TSN and RDS combined) Week 2: Hamilton vs. Montreal — 140,400 (RDS) Saskatchewan vs. Winnipeg — 361,700 (TSN) |
The demographics would probably be favorable to the long-term success of semi-pro basketball in Winnipeg. There are approx. 90,000 Filippinos in the city and they tend to gravitate towards basketball.
Many recent immigrants to Winnipeg are Sikh. I'm not sure to what degree they enjoy basketball as a spectator sport. If they do, that would probably be encouraging sign for pro ball in Winnipeg. |
Cable TV Numbers Are Falling Faster Than Expected
Kayla Wassell cordcuttersnews.com June 8, 2023 |
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DAZN paved the way for 6+ foreign-owned sports streamers focused on soccer to come to Canada. The Prem's success at DAZN led fubo to outbid them for the Prem. Now, we can watch 70+ leagues/tourneys - basically at least one match everyday. |
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CPL has 3x more twitter followers, 4x more on Youtube & 9.5x more on reddit. Part of it is CEBL is viewed more as a night out entertainment while CPL is viewed in bigger picture terms and has bigger picture ambitions given it is Canada's entrance into global club football & league echo system. |
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But that said, and maybe this is a localized situation specific to Winnipeg, the fact is that Valour is having trouble getting traction with thin crowds and very little prominence in the local sports media. They get a couple of news articles a week but very little chatter on the local sports shows, podcasts, etc. This is a bit surprising to me, I would have expected that the soccer community alone would have kept it on the forefront. But they have lost the casual fans and even the soccer diehards are dropping off. Contrast with the Sea Bears... it's broadly analogous to the CPL in terms of its overall level, but there seems to be much more fan interest so far into the season. The fact that a prior-to-now totally unknown league in Winnipeg can pull in an average of over 6,000 fans through two games speaks to a significant demand for basketball. The basketball community is showing up for the Sea Bears in a way that the soccer community simply is not for Valour. I wonder how much of the CPL's engagement is coming from outside the country, given the number of foreign-born players in the league? |
https://3downnation.com/2023/06/14/2...ear-over-year/
2023 CFL Week 1 English TV ratings down 12 percent year-over-year Sometimes, and quite frankly too often, the CFL doesn’t do itself any favours. Exhibit A: the CFL’s choice for its 2023 season opener. There’s a new major United States network broadcasting the three-down league and Jim Nantz was on the airwaves during The Memorial hosted by Jack Nicklaus, one of the top PGA Tour tournaments outside of the majors, promoting the Lions versus Stampeders. Interested fans who tuned in saw a half-empty McMahon Stadium. Any Jimmy, Joe or Jenny could’ve predicted a sparse crowd in Calgary, especially considering president of business operations Jay McNeil revealed the team’s season ticket holders have decreased by 25 percent since 2019. On top of that, recent ratings data would indicate that — intriguing Nathan Rourke performances aside — the Leos and Stampeders are not large TV draws. Bo Levi Mitchell brings in eyeballs. It’s easy to say in hindsight but the CFL should have put the Tiger-Cats versus Blue Bombers game first on the schedule. The league could also have simply copied what the NFL does, which is match the defending champions against a sexy team. They could have had the reigning Grey Cup champion Argonauts at the start of the Chad Kelly era with multiple opponent options. Mitchell travelling down the QEW for his first game with the Ticats against their storied rivals would’ve ensured hype around the matchup and lots of black and gold fans making the short trip to check out Hamiton’s new franchise quarterback. You could have had the pomp and circumstance of the Argonauts’ 109th Grey Cup banner unveiling and the rest. The league could have also sent Kelly and the Argos to Winnipeg or Saskatchewan where the fans would have shown out. This is about making the league look cool and exciting to a first-time audience. Commissioner Randy Ambrosie wants the CFL to have ‘some swagger’ but that wasn’t the case with a CFL kickoff game that had 17,000 and change in attendance with less than a quarter-million people watching in Canada. There was plenty of competition on TV for Thursday night’s CFL opener, which was beyond the league’s control. The Toronto Blue Jays beat the Houston Astros 3-2 with 876,700 people tuning in on Sportsnet. 1,660,100 watched Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Sportsnet and CBC as the Florida Panthers edged the Las Vegas Golden Knights 3-2 in overtime. Friday Night Football went over 500,000 viewers on TSN in a fun 42-31 win by the Blue Bombers over the Tabbies. The Alouettes and Redblacks’ defensive tilt on Saturday night had a decent number considering it was directly against Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final, which drew 1,853,200 viewers on Sportsnet and CBC. Finally, the Roughriders and Elks produced the highest-rated CFL game in Week 1. English TV ratings were down over 12 percent compared to the first week of regular season Canadian football one year ago. 2023 Week 1 TV ratings: Thursday B.C. at Calgary — 226,900 Friday Hamilton at Winnipeg — 511,500 Saturday Ottawa at Montreal — 278,500 English and 174,000 French Sunday Saskatchewan at Edmonton — 535,300 Total Week 1 average: 388,050 (French included: 431,550) 2022 Week 1 TV ratings: Thursday Montreal at Calgary — 345,500 Friday Ottawa at Winnipeg — 434,000 Saturday Hamilton at Saskatchewan — 557,000 Edmonton at B.C. — 430,000 Total Week 1 average: 441,625 2021 Week 1 TV ratings: Thursday Hamilton at Winnipeg — 683,100 Friday B.C. at Saskatchewan — 764,600 Saturday Toronto at Calgary — 318,400 Ottawa at Edmonton — 341,700 Total Week 1 average: 526,950 2019 Week 1 TV ratings: Thursday Saskatchewan at Hamilton — 522,100 Friday Montreal at Edmonton — 395,600 (French viewership on RDS — 140,000) Saturday Ottawa at Calgary — 490,100 Winnipeg at B.C. — 685,800 Total Week 1 average: 523,400 |
I’ll see if I can find a link but Stanley Cup Final was done 47% in Canada. According to twitter.
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Stanley Cup finals ratings down 43% in u.s. this year too. Combination off all sunbelt finals and games only on cable hurt.
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https://i.pinimg.com/originals/cf/c7...44b0d12a80.jpg |
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