papasmurfbell Posted January 26, 2014 Posted January 26, 2014 http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/26/other-cold-weather-cities-watching-super-bowl-xlviii-weather/ Other cold-weather cities watching Super Bowl XLVIII weatherIf, as it appears, Super Bowl XLVIII won’t be flirting with a meteorological disaster, other cities with cold-weather climates but without climate-controlled stadiums will be trying to enter the Super Bowl rotation.And that’s exactly how the NFL wants it.It took the league nearly a half-century to realize the power of expanding the universe of potential Super Bowl destinations to include major cities that could experience major snowstorms on the day of the game. With more cities in the mix to host the game, more bids will be submitted. With more bids, the competition increases. As the competition increases, the quality of the bids does, too.In the end, the NFL and its teams will make a lot more money.The key will be the weather. Unless and until a blizzard forces the game to be moved by a day or two — or possibly a week — all cities that have the infrastructure to host the game but not a roof on the local stadium will be in play for future Super Bowls.“Washington, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore are all asking, ‘Is this something we can do?‘”Packers president Mark Murphy recently said, via Mark Maske of the Washington Post. “You’d be amazed how many fans and how many [Packers] shareholders here have asked the same thing.”While the Green Bay area lacks the hotel rooms and other essentials for putting on the league’s biggest annual party, other cold-weather cities do — and they’ll all be inclined to roll the dice on the chance to roll the dice on the weather.“I didn’t go in there with the idea this would necessarily open the door to other cities,” Giants co-owner John Mara told Maske of the bidding process that brought Super Bowl XLVIII to New York/New Jersey. “We were in the process of building a new stadium. Certainly the attraction to the other owners of the game being played in the media capital of the world was powerful. [but] I do think if we do a good job and all goes well, it will open the door to other cities, yes.”The loose, unspoken quid pro quo of public stadium financing also comes into play here. If they build it, the Super Bowl will come. While few open-air stadiums currently need to be replaced in cold-weather cities, the possibility of hosting a Super Bowl could be an important factor when the time comes to build a new venue in Washington.Inevitably, other buildings used only 10 times per year will be deemed obsolete. If the carrot of the Super Bowl can augment the stick of moving to L.A. or London, taxpayers will continue to subsidize shrewd billionaires.It’s not something that will happen regularly. Every seven to 10 years should be enough to keep the cold-weather cities interested and the warm-weather cities on their toes. As a result, it could be 50 years or longer until a Super Bowl finally is affected by adverse winter weather.In the interim, the Super Bowl bidding process will generate more and more money for the entity that has the exclusive power to determine where the game will be played. Quote
thesteelhurtin Posted January 26, 2014 Posted January 26, 2014 http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/26/other-cold-weather-cities-watching-super-bowl-xlviii-weather/ The next one will be in green bay or Pittsburgh or maybe Chicago. They are going to award the older teams first and foremost and that's how it should be. The thing that could hurt green bay is there isn't much to do there and I'm not sure they could handle that many people. The thing that could hurt Pittsburgh is that normally 85 percent of the days in February see snow. Honestly I think Pittsburgh is a good spot for it. It could handle the people and there is plenty to do there. Throw in that the same owners have owned it since it begin in 33 and the 6 trophies and I would say they have earned it. Quote
papasmurfbell Posted January 26, 2014 Author Posted January 26, 2014 GB would be about inpossible. There are simply not enough hotel rooms. Quote
thesteelhurtin Posted January 26, 2014 Posted January 26, 2014 GB would be about inpossible. There are simply not enough hotel rooms. Yeah that's what I was thinking. Do they deserve one absolutely but it would never work. Also I cant see all the stars and big wigs going to Green Bay. Plus its frickin frigid up there this time of year which is yet another thing that could keep pgh off the list, Quote
papasmurfbell Posted January 26, 2014 Author Posted January 26, 2014 The networks and staffing would use every hotel room in the city. Where woudl they have the parties? It just wouldn't work. Quote
thesteelhurtin Posted January 26, 2014 Posted January 26, 2014 The networks and staffing would use every hotel room in the city. Where woudl they have the parties? It just wouldn't work.I have never been to Baltimore could they handle a super bowl? Is there a bunch for tourists to do there I would imagine there would be. For me it's and older city with history and I love history so I don't know why I have never been there. Like I said in another thread I want to go to a Steelers Ravens game there but nobody wants to go with me.Maybe me and the wife will come party with yinz for a game. Quote
papasmurfbell Posted January 26, 2014 Author Posted January 26, 2014 Easily. Between BWI to Hunt valley the length of the light rail there are 10's of thousands of rooms. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2012-01-21/news/bs-md-marbella-super-bowl-here-20120121_1_hotel-rooms-roger-goodell-paul-tagliabue So I counted them. No, not really, but I went straight to the source all the tourism folks consider the definitive hotel census-taker. According to STR, the Henderson, Tenn.-based hotel performance benchmarking firm, the Baltimore area has 32,387 rooms. Quote
thesteelhurtin Posted January 26, 2014 Posted January 26, 2014 Easily. Between BWI to Hunt valley the length of the light rail there are 10's of thousands of rooms. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2012-01-21/news/bs-md-marbella-super-bowl-here-20120121_1_hotel-rooms-roger-goodell-paul-tagliabueYeah they got plenty of rooms the I found Pittsburgh has 24k rooms with more hotels being built. That's just counting the greater Pittsburgh area sp the number might be a littler higher then that but still plenty of rooms. Quote
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