Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
I don't want to minimize the white elephant status of the Big O (which it clearly was for us) but there are lots of huge stadiums out there that probably aren't used much more even if they have a primary tenant - usually either an NFL team with 8-9 home dates or an NCAA team with 7-8 home dates.
Throw in the odd concert and a monster truck and tractor pull and that's about it for how much use the facility gets in a given year.
Especially if they're open air and in colder climates those stadiums might even get less use than the Big O, and their revenue from events might be comparable or even less.
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The difference between a stadium used only for a single NFL or NCAA football team and the Big O is that the tenant in the former will pay the bills, or at least part of them. You have to wonder what the purpose is for the continued existence of a stadium that has no tenants and increasingly no raison d'etre, particularly when that stadium requires continuous injections of substantial amounts of money.
If I lived in Montreal I would probably be wondering what else the hundreds of millions of dollars in stadium renovations could have bought, along with all the money spent on the place this century since it became clear that the Big O was basically a white elephant that no other teams would be using.
Hey, maybe the RIO (or whatever it's called now) should buy the Alouettes and move them to the Big O. The purchase price and any losses would probably be chump change relative to their budget once you factor in capital costs, and it would at least give the Big O the respectability of having an actual user for the stadium.