Emphasis, or beating a dead horse

The Chronicle’s Susan Slusser catches up with Lew Wolff on the stadium situation:

Wolff reiterated that he believes that the Bay Area should be considered like the other two-team markets, none of which have territorial rights assigned.

Wolff said that funding for any stadium approved in San Jose is in place. “We’re prepared to build the stadium,” he said. “We have the funding, the equity, the sources of revenue.”

This is the first I’ve heard or read Wolff confirm this. Obviously he’s not going to divulge details on how this would work, but we’ve made plenty of reasonably good guesses here to paint a picture.

In other news, the Kings have asked for an extension to the March 1 deadline to petition for a franchise move, presumably to Anaheim.

With both of those in mind, here’s a simple poll question.

86 thoughts on “Emphasis, or beating a dead horse

  1. Wow the Kings situation sure doesn’t look good if you’re a pessimist like me or Sac mayor Kevin Johnson. Looks to me like the Maloofs are just stalling for time to both finish up the deal with Anaheim, and to avoid playing lame duck home games in front of more empty seats than usual.

  2. Amazing that the NBA can address territorial rights with not one but two teams– located about the same distance that a new ballpark would be in SJ from SF– in less than 3 months- MLB is going on 2 years- Bud is just a bit out of touch- to Sacto’s credit at least they are not threatening the bogus lawsuits

    As I recall Sacto voted on 2 arena plans- both defeated by voters and tried to put together the swap of Cal expo property- all within the past 10 years- Oakland on the other hand did nothing for the past 15 years and now in it’s final hour is trying to do something- Sacto I feel bad for- But I have zero sympathy for Oakland’s issue- especially with the A’s proposing to stay in Bay Area

  3. If SJ Cisco Field opens by 2016, it would’ve been a decade since initially annoucing that Cisco Systems purchased the naming rights. That has to be some kind of record.

  4. Sacto isn’t going quietly into the night either. That’s why they’ve commissioned this ICON/Taylor report. Whether the Maloofs will wait around for it remains to be seen…

  5. What’s funny is that, from reading some Kings forums, many blame their city for a lot and would welcome a move to San Jose over somewhere much further. Stark contrast, for sure.

  6. Wolff can get the ballpark up in San Jose no problem because the private sector is there supporting him (SVLG) with open arms.

    He can sell luxury suites, advertising, and naming rights (done) all day long and have a field day.

    This plus the fans have $$ for season tickets which is secondary to the pieces above. I know ML you want to see actually how it is done but the SF model serves well as an example.

    Granted SF built theirs during the dot.com boom but in reality did they have SVLG in their corner? The answer is no and Lew Wolff knows he can do this or why would he press MLB to open up San Jose?

    As for the Kings- The City did try very hard over the years to keep the team but the Maloof’s see the end and I am sure they sat down with each other 1 year ago and said “if this land swap falls through we are done in Sac”.

    Owners have picked up and left over far less and the Maloof’s to their credit kept the team in an antiquated building for years losing tons of money trying to keep them in Sac.

    Farewell Kings! Now the Warriors will get huge TV rights over the Kings old area that used to blackout Warriors games.

    Good news is that with the Kings gone San Jose is prime to get a team in the next 1-2 years as there is no way they keep Nor Cal 1-team for long.

  7. Nam, part of that is because Kings fans realize a silver lining when they see one. Not only would the Kings in SJ allow them to still see their team, but it would also piss off the Warriors, which they appreciate.

    Part of it though I think is the alternative has already presented itself in Anaheim. I don’t think alot of the Oakland only folks actually believe the A’s would leave the Bay Area, hence their attitude. If a city suddenly reared its head outside the Bay Area for the A ‘s to move to, I bet alot of the Oakland only folks would suddenly start sounding like Kings fans.

  8. grizz in mem and the hornets in no are the two likely teams to move? question is sj a future home for an nba team? gotta think the pacific northwest will get back a team eventually be it in van or sea. also kc is also thought to be a future home for an nba franchise with their new arena, still can’t beleive there isn’t a nba team in the state of missouri be it stl/kc and they were rumored to be one of the favs for the kings when they moved but that’s not the case now with this anaheim link to that franchise.

    really don’t see any other nba franchise moving anytime soon other than those three.

  9. I could be wrong (and too lazy to look it up), but I’m pretty sure that the Maloofs never offered a dime of their own money for any facility in Sacramento. In each proposal, they wanted someone else to pay for the land and building, get a sweetheart lease and keep all the revenue generated by their games. That was certainly the case in the ballot measure.

    Whether that fits the definition of “doing more to stay in the region” is up to debate.

  10. Ed, I think what was meant was from the city’s side. Sac has been trying to get something going with public funding. And has made several attempts to do so. Oakland by comparison hasn’t done a damn thing. Even now their only proposal involves doing an EIR and MAYBE buying some of the land for the stadium (if they can get the owners to sell).

  11. No, the question was clearly phrased “Which team” and on that point Ed is very much correct in his assessment.

  12. The way I look at it, all of the Bay Area is the same market. So, it’s no contest since everything the A’s have done has been to keep them in the BA. However, because of the reasons Ed mentioned above, I would still vote the A’s even if the question was narrowed to the cities.

  13. San Jose was off limits to the Kings because of the Warriors sale that occurred last year having a provision to sell rights to a 2nd team in the Bay Area.

    SVSE did not offer a 100M loan to pay off relocation fees/loans like Henry Samueli did in Anaheim.

    Now with the Kings long gone the Warriors value just went up and it opens up San Jose for a cheaper price and probably a Larry Ellison owned team.

    I see the Hornets, Grizzlies, Bucks, Pacers, and Minnesota as likely candidates to move to larger markets like the Kings are about to do.

    Vancouver, San Jose, New Jersey, and Chicago (2nd team) are going to get new teams after the new CBA is put in.

    The NBA has had good revenue growth but piss poor revenue sharing amongst its teams and the players are right on that one.

    They either contract or move teams or perhaps contract and the re-expand in new markets.

    The A’s are coming to San Jose without a doubt but it will take a lawsuit to do so.

  14. This South Bay corporate support thing gets blown out of proportion. Many of the _largest_ members of SVLG are based in SF/Oakland (PG&E, Kaiser-Permanente, Wells Fargo, etc.) or outside the Bay Area (AT&T, IBM, Lockheed, Citibank, etc.) I sincerely doubt the real big players on the advertising, luxury box front in this group are as averse to downtown Oakland as are Lew Wolff (who after all, has a luxury hotel just a few blocks from the proposed San Jose site) or the local South Bay fanboys on this forum. Plus, there are many major corporations signed up on the Let’s Go Oakland petition: Levi Strauss, Genentech, Credit Suisse, Onyx Pharm, Clorox, Barclays, Kaiser, etc. And gee whiz, The Gap has a ton of stores and sales in the East Bay, so why wouldn’t they be okay, and a major advertiser and ticket buyer for a location in downtown Oakland, 20 minutes from their corporate HQ, Mr. Fisher? The bottom line is that there just isn’t any apparent market for major league sports in San Jose, and MLB is hesitating for that reason alone. I’d point out that San Jose has been bigger than Oakland since the 60s, but has yet to build a facility to attract the NBA, NFL, or MLB, while Oakland continues to host all three. And how come SJ State is so athletically anemic, with all that potential sports booster money floating around the South Bay? MLB doesn’t want to foot the bill to test drive San Jose, only to learn they never built a stadium themselves because they’re really more into ice skating and playstation than anything else. Between Mr. Fisher, Mayor Quan’s administration, and Bay Area corporate partners, this stadium could easily be built in Oakland and be a huge success. Lew Wolff is the problem here. He’s letting his personal ambition in downtown San Jose ruin the chances for a perfectly excellent opportunity in Jack London Square (which is also better situated for the majority of A’s fans than is the far southern end of the region)

  15. I find it hilarious that on one hand many Oakland partisans will say that San Jose is Giants territory and can never change and then someone like tps will come in and say that San Jose is a terrible sports town. It can’t be both. Have some consistency, man!

  16. There’s no inconsistency or even a connection between the two things you mention. Perhaps in your own subjective mind I suppose.

  17. I just hope if the Sac Kings move to Anaheim they will change there name to something other than the Kings. Having two Kings teams in the same metro area would be too confusing.

  18. The crazy uber Oakland and San Jose supporters (it doesn’t matter which side, they’re essentially the same) should be happy MLB employs T-rights. Otherwise, they’d be the San Francisco Athletics Baseball Club, which surprisingly has a great ring to it.

  19. @tps – Sure there is. San Jose has a million people. Are you really saying that all of San Jose’s baseball fans are Giants fans and the rest don’t care at all? That’s absolutely ridiculous. You’re just as bad as the South Bay homers.

    All of this really comes down to being able to pay for the stadium. If you’re right, Selig will pick Oakland because he won’t have to wage the T-rights war. If not, San Jose has to be the option. Wolff has his plan. The onus is on Oakland to put up something that make sense for all parties.

  20. Speaking of corporate support….the 4 biggest names that helped get the private financing for At&t Park? Coca-Cola(Atlanta) Anheiser-Bush(St. Louis) Pac Bell (SF) and B of A (NC)

    so 3 of the 4 were OUT OF STATE. and the giants did fine

    I see no reason why Pepsi-Co, MillerCoors and Wells Fargo can be big players in a new Oakland Park. I agree with TPS about Oakland’s corporate chances.

  21. I’m saying the proof is in the pudding ML. Who cares if there a thousand or a million baseball fans in the South Bay. They’ve refused from the dawn of time to construct stadiums.Why?

  22. @TPS “there just isn’t any apparent market for major league sports in San Jose”. So what, the Sharks aren’t a major league sports team? By the way, the Sharks play in the sun belt which is usually below league average in attendance. Last I checked, the Sharks weren’t struggling to sell tickets. The A’s on the other hand struggle to sell tickets in a city which houses 3 major league sports teams. Maybe if the A’s were strategically placed closer to the economic engine of the bay area and farther from the popular kids across the bay, they could sell more tickets and thrive.

  23. re: Levi Strauss, Genentech, Credit Suisse, Onyx Pharm, Clorox, Barclays, Kaiser, etc. And gee whiz, The Gap has a ton of stores

    Which of these companies has ever purchased naming rights for the existing Coliseum stadium or arena? What’s that? None of them have? We have Cisco ready to sponsor a South Bay ballpark for $120 mill. What”s Oakland fetching for naming rights these days?

  24. @tps – From the dawn of time? The reason San Jose has the arena is because people voted on it. They didn’t get a ballpark in 1992 because the citizens voted no new taxes. Meanwhile Oakland and Alameda County have repeatedly gotten stadium deals done without putting it to the voters. The two situations are entirely apples and oranges.

  25. @wha? – AT&T is actually pulling its name off the AAA stadium in OKC as part of “changing their marketing strategy.” National sponsors are good, but they’re only good for about a dozen suites and sponsorship deals, often less. Plus they’ll be available everywhere. It’s all about local dollars.

  26. Do we have it in print that Cisco will not pay for the naming rights in JLS? Or Oracle, or Chevron, or Kaiser? I think you guys are confusing “Lew Wolff hasn’t seriously discussed Oakland with anyone” and “No one is interested in Oakland”.

  27. Tps,
    Just some advice: quit posting such nonsense while you’re already way, I mean WAY, behind (foot in mouth anyone?).
    On second thought, this is a free country, so continue to humor us if you must.
    Wha? If those four sponsors of the Giants offer to put up $462 million of their own cash to build an Oakland ballpark, then you’re on!
    Until then…(don’t hold your breath brah!)

  28. @tps – No. But they didn’t come aboard with the Coliseum North plan and they haven’t said anything about what Oakland is doing now. But Oakland is working from the assumption that Cisco won’t be there as they’re looking for other naming rights suitors such as Clorox.

  29. The problem I have with you ML, is that Sid, pjk and others made typically false/misleading/exaggerated statements that are characteristic of this forum, and as usual, you let those stand all hunky dory, indicating the editorial bias of this site, but then you are quick to cajole me for objecting to their stilted point of view and offering my own opinion in contrast. You find me hilarious, but your silence indicates your on board with them. You get poor marks from me on feigned objectivity.

  30. @tps – I’ve had to slap down Sid and pjk multiple times over the past several weeks. But you see me as you want to see me and that’s fine. I’m not trying to convince you.

  31. Well, I hadn’t read the site for months because of your obvious love affair with the SV Jaycees on here. Thanks for letting me know you finally got off your ass on that. I sure couldn’t tell from this thread.

    • @tps – You haven’t read the site for months? Let’s see, you seem to know the posters you dislike by their handles and posting styles. Based on your IP I’ve seen the following activity:

      Nov – 13 page views
      Dec – 49
      Jan – 3
      Feb – 12

      I know you’re a bitter guy and I get that. That’s fine. You had the makings of a decent debate-starting comment until you went into the lowest common denominator as an attack. As much as I try to stop myself from responding sometimes, I can’t help that I was raised in the South Bay, so I responded. You kept going on tangents that are irrelevant to the base issue at hand. San Jose State? It’s a freaking commuter school. Cal’s supposed to have a great number of boosters but that didn’t stop them from losing baseball.

      Seriously, cut the bullshit. This stadium business is a dirty game. Did Oakland score the A’s by being all sweetness and light? Of course not. They made a business deal – a damned good one at that – and the Coliseum happened. An alienated fanbase in Kansas City who felt they never got a proper chance got screwed. Oakland lured the A’s and the Warriors just as San Jose is trying to lure the A’s now. Who got the Coliseum deal done? East Bay business interests, that’s who. If any new ballpark or stadium is ever going to happen again, that well will be visited again. Unfortunately that well is near dry. Who is getting it done in San Jose? South Bay business interests.

      You don’t have to like it. Many posters here and elsewhere are furious and I understand that. But I’m not going to go rah-rah-Oakland without some real indicators of significant activity. Getting that EIR started is just that, a start. A post every couple of months about how great the restaurant scene is, is not pertinent. And unless that East Bay business base comes up with a deal – one that doesn’t put the A’s in a terrible bind as far as lease terms and revenue go – Oakland is going to lose the A’s one way or another. That’s the bottom line.

      • @tps – You haven’t read the site for months? Let’s see, you seem to know the posters you dislike by their handles and posting styles. Based on your IP I’ve seen the following activity:I know you’re a bitter guy and I get that. That’s fine. You had the makings of a decent debate-starting comment until you went into the lowest common denominator as an attack. As much as I try to stop myself from responding sometimes, I can’t help that I was raised in the South Bay, so I responded. You kept going on tangents that are irrelevant to the base issue at hand. San Jose State? It’s a freaking commuter school. Cal’s supposed to have a great number of boosters but that didn’t stop them from losing baseball.Seriously, cut the bullshit. This stadium business is a dirty game. Did Oakland score the A’s by being all sweetness and light? Of course not. They made a business deal – a damned good one at that – and the Coliseum happened. An alienated fanbase in Kansas City who felt they never got a proper chance got screwed. Oakland lured the A’s and the Warriors just as San Jose is trying to lure the A’s now. Who got the Coliseum deal done? East Bay business interests, that’s who. If any new ballpark or stadium is ever going to happen again, that well will be visited again. Unfortunately that well is near dry. Who is getting it done in San Jose? South Bay business interests.You don’t have to like it. Many posters here and elsewhere are furious and I understand that. But I’m not going to go rah-rah-Oakland without some real indicators of significant activity. Getting that EIR started is just that, a start. A post every couple of months about how great the restaurant scene is, is not pertinent. And unless that East Bay business base comes up with a deal – one that doesn’t put the A’s in a terrible bind as far as lease terms and revenue go – Oakland is going to lose the A’s one way or another. That’s the bottom line.

        BRAVO R.M.! BRAVO! Talk about a bomb run to end all bomb runs. The rabid deniers won’t come within 100 clicks of this blog ever again, and that is a fact!

  32. “This South Bay corporate support thing gets blown out of proportion. Many of the _largest_ members of SVLG are based in SF/Oakland (PG&E, Kaiser-Permanente, Wells Fargo, etc.) or outside the Bay Area (AT&T, IBM, Lockheed, Citibank, etc.)”

    Absolute drivel. The SLVG has 324 members. The vast majority of them are, unsurprisingly, based in the South Bay. And you continue to try to pump up the East Bay’s weak corporate base by claiming San Francisco’s corporate base, ignoring the fact it already has a team of its own.

    There’s a reason everyone with an actual financial stake in this has made the judgment that the South Bay is the place to be. Who knows more about the A’s business and the business of baseball, Lew Wolff, Steve Schott, Bill Neukom, Peter Macgowan, or “thisplanetsux”?

  33. “Well, I hadn’t read the site for months because of your obvious love affair with the SV Jaycees on here. Thanks for letting me know you finally got off your ass on that. I sure couldn’t tell from this thread.”

    That is a beautiful backhanded compliment . There’s great form and a wonderful follow through.

  34. Oh I see the president of the SV Jaycees showed up to spew more of the b.s. that is his stock and trade. Bartleby,I said “many of the largest members of SVLG are…” which is a clear fact that can not be argued. The VAST MAJORITY of the 324 companies in the group are MUCH MUCH MUCH MUCH smaller than PG&E, IBM, Kaiser-Permanente, AT&T, Wells Fargo, etc. But it’s always been plain that your only skill in the presence facts, is the urge to dodge, twist, or distort them through insults of those who present them.

  35. A’s fans are an endangered species. That said, if you want your voice to be heard, do it on KTRB or CSNCA. Attacking the editor of the best A’s ballpark resource site on the internet is not only a waste of your time, it’s just plain uncool. You’ll be better served making friends because when we get to the phase where PSLs go on sale, most of us might have to do halvsies with each other. smiley face?

  36. You know Briggs, I get insulted all the time directly by ML, tony d, bartleby and others in this group for stating my opinions (and unlike most, I always try to back them up with facts). If you ever once chided them for being dickheads toward people they simply disagree with, I’d have an ounce of respect for you.

  37. Dude, Apple, Google, and Cisco are MUCH larger than PG&E, AT&T, Kaiser Permanente, and Wells Fargo. Hell, Apple could swallow a couple of those names whole.

  38. @tsp- .disco signed the letter from the SVLG to MLB asking that the A’s be allowed to move to SJ and for it to happen in a timely fashion- that pretty much tells you that they won’ t be part of any Oakland deal

  39. Damn iPad- ahh- playing the victim- I meant Cisco- not .disco

  40. @tps- You forget how Oakland has disrespected the A’s big time over the years. First with reneging on a “done deal” in 1994 to make the Coliseum baseball only to put up Mt. Davis and bring the Raiders back.

    The A’s sued and won 16 million because they had signed paperwork and City of Oakland/Alameda County paid it in full because they lost miserably in court.

    Jerry Brown selling Uptown to a developer who had him in his back pocket instead of using the ballpark to spark the ancillary development in that area.

    Or the fact that Oakland/Alameda County has put in 100s of millions of dollars for the Raiders and Warriors but have put in a big doughnut for the A’s over the years.

    The A’s consistently are in the bottom 1/3 of the league in attendance even when they are good. Last year they went 81-81 and were only ahead of a horrendous Cleveland team in attendance.

    ML, pjk, bartleby and I for what we disagree on do agree that if Oakland could get something up and running we are all for it 100%…..Don’t get anyone of us wrong on that ever.

    But in reality San Jose is a big sports town and the Sharks have proven that over the years. The City of San Jose has tried to get the A’s to San Jose for years and only because of the unconstitutional AE that MLB has is the only reason stopping it…that and the Giants horse shit owner BN (this coming from a life long Giants fan).

    Lew Wolff tried for years to get something done in Oakland even before he became co-owner, he was VP under the old Schott-Hoffman regime.

    He has 227 pages of notes detailing why Oakland and Alameda County is not viable. You think he wants to battle the Giants for San Jose? No, but he has no choice because this is going to be a “privately financed” stadium. Oakland won’t put a dime in for construction.

    San Jose has a far larger corporate base than the East Bay and that isn’t even an argument. Al Davis has gone on record stating “Oakland is a depressed area”….That guy is from the East Bay too.

    That SVLG letter alone trumps the entire East Bay completely when it comes to corporate support. Time to look at what is best for the A’s going forward…Cisco Field in Downtown San Jose 50 miles from ATT park privately financed with revenue streams guaranteed for years to come…With BART, HSR, ACE, CalTrain, and light rail all one day being across the street and 5 major freeways in the area opposite commute in most cases?

    Or a new ballpark in Oakland (no name) 10 miles away from ATT park that needs 16 businesses to be relocated, major transportation overhaul of the entire area and only 1 freeway that is always jam packed at all times of the day going there?

    Get real and support the Wolff/Fisher in trying get something done in the Bay Area. San Jose is the best bet by far since they have an EIR done, SVLG backing them, 2 businesses to relocate only, and have a Downtown site.

  41. New Jersey can’t get a stadium because Steinbrenner believes in a free market except when it doesn’t help the Yankees.

  42. “Bartleby,I said “many of the largest members of SVLG are…” which is a clear fact that can not be argued.”

    It’s an irrelevant, misleading fact. First of all, premium seat purchases do not necessarily scale with the size of a company. Second of all, a gigantic company which has no physical presence near a ballpark site is unlikely to buy any suites or club seats at all. Third of all, two of your examples (Lockheed and IBM) have major facilities in the South Bay and, to my knowledge, no significant physical presence. Fourth of all, it is every bit as much a true statement to say MOST of the largest members of SLVG (HP, Apple, Cisco, Microsoft, Lockheed, IBM, Intel, Adobe, Applied Materials, Google, Yahoo, Facebook, eBay) maintain major facilities in the South Bay, company headquarters, or both.

    Ultimately, this comment is simply your attempt, once again, to gloss over the fact that the East Bay has little corporate base by somehow claiming corporations from other regions.

    “The VAST MAJORITY of the 324 companies in the group are MUCH MUCH MUCH MUCH smaller than PG&E, IBM, Kaiser-Permanente, AT&T, Wells Fargo, etc.”

    As stated above, irrelevant. Kaiser is a non-profit, and unlikely to buy much in the way of premium seating. IBM has far more presence in the South Bay than East Bay. Wells Fargo is in San Francisco. Even PG&E would find little difference in drive time from their company headquarters to downtown San Jose vs. downtown Oakland.

    In any event, the key isn’t having a few giant corporations (not that the East Bay does), since each company is still probably buying only one suite. The key is having lots of large companies that can each justify the cost of a suite.

    “But it’s always been plain that your only skill in the presence facts, is the urge to dodge, twist, or distort them through insults of those who present them.”

    Here, I’m just speechless. Clearly your level of self-awareness is no stronger than your purported “facts” or logic.

    This I’m getting from the guy who’s presented about 85 different versions of the following gibberish: “If you compare Santa Clara County to all eight other Bay Areas combined, and ignore the fact that most of the corporate base of that group of eight is actually in San Francisco, which already has its own team, the East Bay has a corporate base to draw on that almost comes close to the South Bay.”

    And as for insults, I might employ some mild sarcasm from time-to-time, but I’m pretty sure I never called anyone on here a dickhead. Mr. Pot, please meet Mr. Kettle.

  43. Sentence 5, above, should end “…no significant physical presence in the East Bay.”

  44. Totally off topic, but yeah iPad suck for typing. I’m on my way to an Engaget event now. The autocorrection can get annoying. Whenever I want to type “as” it comes out as “A’s.” Coco Crisp’s are also riddled with the unintentional “A’s” typo.

  45. @GoA’s. Above. Coco Crisp’s twitter. It’s cold.

  46. Lockheed has 0 physical presence in the East Bay, though does at least part of the time have a suite at the Coliseum. I’ve gotten to go to it once and have seen it on a few other occasions.

  47. A’s Fan: according to Fortune Magazine, in 2010, Wells Fargo alone had revenues about equal to Google, Cisco, and Apple COMBINED. AT&T had greater revenues than ANY company in Silicon Valley. As if it mattered to you.

    Sid: Okay I give up.

    Bartleby: in the past, you repeatedly fudged demographic figures, using values 200, 300, 400 percent off the mark, while accusing me of playing loose with facts. You tried in the past to claim there were 10 times as many Fortune 500 companies in the South Bay as the rest of the Bay Area, that there twice as many people in the South Bay as the rest of the Bay Area, that Walnut Creek to South Diridon is no worse a drive than Walnut Creek to downtown Oakland. These are just huge and ridiculous lies, streaming forth in a pattern from you. Knowingly falsifying data by huge amounts to try and win arguments is pretty straight up a dickhead move. I don’t know if pointing out someone’s deceit and lack of character is the same thing as actually lacking the character, but if so, then fine, I’m a dickhead too.

    ML: I wasn’t clear. Sure I’ve opened the page up occasionally and poked around to see if there was breaking news (15 page reads in 2 months, gee…), I was talking about reading these forums such that I’d have noticed a difference in the way you ignore idiot commentary from anyone in favor of San Jose (or anti-Oakland), but are quick with smartass hostility to anyone with doubts about MLB in the South Bay.

    • @tps – Here’s a tip. Don’t like the way the comments are moderated? Don’t read ’em. Simple as that. You’ll breathe easier. It’s not like they’re “content.”

  48. Dude, just give up while you’re way behind.

  49. Can’t stand seeing the same lies told over and over again? Can’t stand seeing people who prefer the truth run out of here on a wave of insults? Then move along buddy, this ain’t the place for you!

  50. this is almost as good as my meltdown with jk – lol

  51. ” ..according to Fortune Magazine, in 2010, Wells Fargo alone had revenues about equal to Google, Cisco, and Apple COMBINED. AT&T had greater revenues than ANY company in Silicon Valley.”

    @TPS – Interesting. Got Link?

  52. FWIW,
    Wells Fargo is headquartered in San Francisco and AT&T is headquartered in Dallas TX. And yes, there are some company’s across the country (and even Bay Area) that enjoy greater revenues than many here in Silicon Valley…BUT SO @#$%&* WHAT!
    (Hey all, maybe this will work)…TPS, you are 100%, undeniably correct in your assessment of the corporate revenue picture of the Bay Area!! Hip hip hooray for TPS!! Hip hip hooray!!

  53. @David. Wells Fargo is #19 on the Fortune 500, much of the rise coming from its merger with Wachovia. There was a time when Wells Fargo was the “financial services sponsor” of the A’s. Fremont Bank has been for a few years, but I believe Wells has been back in the fold for a bit. Wells Fargo is a perfect fit yet again because rival BofA is the Giants’ charter sponsor.

    One of the points Bartleby was trying to make that tps ignored is that Wells is going to be there wherever the ballpark is, and that there is only Wells – they’ll get a suite and sponsorship deal. There are no other such slots as the deals are exclusive. There need to be a lot of smaller companies to fill in the rest, and in this case we’re talking 40 large suites, 40 mini suites, and 3-4,000 club seats.

  54. Let’s just face it, the A’s staying in Alameda County and most likely Oakland is the path of least resistance for the team’s stadium issue. Sounds like if you could go private financed stadium in Oakland is the best and most affordable and viable option. MLB buys land in Oakland. A’s build the stadium. A’s lease stadium land from from MLB. Oakland taxes the income from A’s and MLB profits. Everybody wins. San Jose gets to keep the minor league team, the Giants keep the Santa Clara territory, Oakland maintains the tax base the A’s provide, the A’s have a new stadium, and MLB can make some profit off of the private deal.

    Land Costs: $90M
    Construction costs : $450M

    I did some calcuations and at $650M for land acquisition and construction costs assuming my projections above extremely low. The annual debt service amortized over 30 years with an interest rate of 5.5% (an achievable loan for the likes of Wolff or Fisher) the annual debt service payment would be $45M . Let’s say the A’s payroll is $90M. Assuming this costs and debt for land acquisition construction in Oakland, what revenue do the A’s have to bring in for current ownership to receive a modest return on investment? Is is possible in Oakland considering all the East Bay limitations in terms of corporate sponsorship? Marine Layer help me out!

    • You are more than entitled to your opinion Ethan. I’ll give you credit though; at least you’re not foaming at the mouth like some on this site. FYI, San Jose WANTS to upgrade to Major League status and rid itself of Single A status, so in that sense SJ looses under your opinion.

      Let’s just face it, the A’s staying in Alameda County and most likely Oakland is the path of least resistance for the team’s stadium issue. Sounds like if you could go private financed stadium in Oakland is the best and most affordable and viable option. MLB buys land in Oakland. A’s build the stadium. A’s lease stadium land from from MLB. Oakland taxes the income from A’s and MLB profits. Everybody wins. San Jose gets to keep the minor league team, the Giants keep the Santa Clara territory, Oakland maintains the tax base the A’s provide, the A’s have a new stadium, and MLB can make some profit off of the private deal.

  55. A’s belong in Sacramento!!! End of discussion!!!

  56. @Ethan – Effectively, the A’s would have to guarantee that virtually all of the debt could be serviced annually, even if the place doesn’t sell out. So if the A’s had to cover an additional $45 million every year (as opposed to $2-3 million now), their revenue would have to rise to nearly $200 million annually, which is where the Giants are. That’s where it gets difficult to figure out if Oakland has the backing to make it happen, because they will surely be heavily dependent on regional sponsorships to get it done. Take a look at my article on the debt rule from September. It’ll show you what other limitations are in place.

    @sactodavey – Not gonna happen.

  57. So according to the Forbes 2010 assessment of the team, the revenues are $155M. So the A’s have to bring in $355M in revenue under my assumptions for Oakland to really work. That is a tall task.

  58. @Ethan – Revenues have to rise to $200 million, not an additional $200 million. Part of the financing is expected to be a loan from MLB. There is no way MLB grants that piece unless the revenue streams are locked in.

    • @Ethan – Revenues have to rise to $200 million, not an additional $200 million. Part of the financing is expected to be a loan from MLB. There is no way MLB grants that piece unless the revenue streams are locked in.

      Lew Wolff on SJ ballpark, “We have the funding, the equity, the sources of revenue.” Revenue streams anyone? Music to my ears R.M.!

  59. AAPL market cap: $320.8B net income: $16.64B
    GOOG market cap: $196.1B net income: $8.505B
    CSCO market cap: $103B net income: $7.578B

    PCG market cap:$18.16B net income:$1.113B
    WFC market cap:$170.1B net income:$11.77B
    ATT market cap:$166.2B net income:$21.86B

  60. @ Ethan – Better idea….A’s move to SJ. Lew Wolff buys the land and the stadium. SJ becomes a Major League city and the A’s thrive from revenue standpoint. Oakland takes the RDA money for real improvements to their city and starts to blossom as SF sister city. Former Pro-Oaklanders become Giants fans travelling 10 minutes to PacBell park since they’ve been rooting for Neukum and TR rights for the past 3 years. Everybody wins including: a) real Oakland citizens who won’t get shafted with another Al Davis deal. Wolff and HIS A’s who get the revenue stream they’ve been deserving. b) SJ and SB baseball fans who patiently waited for a couple of decades and did the smart thing in acquiring land and doing EIRs ahead of time w/o any public funding to the park. c) MLB who pickup additional REAL corporate sponsorship (Cisco + SVLG), don’t have to fork out money on loans, and take one MLB off of welfare. d) And lastly, proOaklanders (the closet Gnats fans), will stop complaining about the horrid commute to the SB and take their precious BART to SF. 🙂 Win, win, win…let;d do it!

  61. I’d have to say the Kings have done a lot more. They’ve been at this for going on twelve years now. But the poll muddies the issue–it’s not like the Kings can move to Stockton.

    If the question is, “Have the A’s done as much to stay in Oakland as the Kings have to stay in Sac?” then the answer is emphatically no. If Oakland’s efforts to “stay” include Fremont, Santa Clara, and San Jose, then it’s still “no,” but far less emphatically.

  62. “Bartleby: in the past, you repeatedly fudged demographic figures, using values 200, 300, 400 percent off the mark, while accusing me of playing loose with facts.”

    You DO play loose with facts. You’re constantly trying to represent SF statistics as if they were Oakland’s. Now you’re apparently trying to claim Fortune 500 companies as part of the East Bay’s corporate base regardless of where they’re located. Since you’re now claiming Wells Fargo and AT&T for Oakland, why don’t you go the rest of the way and claim Wal-Mart, Exxon, and Ford as well?

    I’m sure I’ve made factual errors from time to time. We’re arguing on the internet, for crissake; I’m not preparing a brief for court. I do what we all do, surf the internet and cut-and-paste. Sometimes I make rhetorical statements not intended to be taken literally (intelligent people who aren’t consumed with an agenda can tell the difference). Sometimes I’ve made a general statement based on my general sense of things without doing an extensive research project before posting. (For example, when I said large portions of Alameda and Contra Costa County would have comparable drive times during rush hour, I didn’t actually do a calculation of every city in both counties before making the statement). Where I’ve been proven wrong, I’ve admitted it.

    You on the other hand, never admit anything; you rarely even respond directly to the facts that don’t fit your world view. Your general modus operandi is to blow small errors out of proportion, intentionally misconstrue what are obviously rhetorical statements, accuse other posters of “lying” and ignore the fact that your “corrected” facts don’t change the underlying point whatsoever. Oh, and make disingenous arguments which pretend San Francisco is actually part of Oakland, doesn’t already have a team, and that there’s a moat surrounding Santa Clara County preventing outsiders from getting in. You’re also consistently and gratuitously rude.

    In response to your specific charges:

    “You tried in the past to claim there were 10 times as many Fortune 500 companies in the South Bay as the rest of the Bay Area,”

    I think this is a mischaracterization of what I said; I believe I said the South Bay had a 2-1 advantage over the rest of the Bay Area generally; I may have said it had a 10-1 advantage over the East Bay. If you know different, show me the link and I’ll comment on the specifics.

    Here’s what Wikipedia says about this subject:

    “As of 2007, there were approximately 80 public companies with annual revenues of over $1 billion a year, and 5-10 more private companies. Nearly 2/3 of these are in the Silicon Valley section of the Bay Area.”

    Bottom line: Based on the above, the South Bay has twice as many large companies of a size suitable for buying premium seating as the rest of the Bay Area combined. So, my basic point is valid.

    “that there twice as many people in the South Bay as the rest of the Bay Area,”

    Again, I’m pretty sure this is a mischaracterization of whatever it was I said. I did object strenuously to your persistent attempts to take the inverted geographic triangle which is the Bay Area and snip off just the lower tip when making your ludicrous, disingenuous “eight counties vs. one” comparisons. If you know different, show me a link.

    The bottom line is, there are just as many people, and way more big corporations, within around a thirty minute drive of downtown San Jose as there are of downtown Oakland, which is the most important radius for purposes of bringing people out to weeknight games. So my basic point is valid.

    “that Walnut Creek to South Diridon is no worse a drive than Walnut Creek to downtown Oakland.”

    Whatever I said was in the context of a weeknight, rush hour trip. From Walnut Creek, it’s a smooth sail against traffic to San Jose during rush hour; traffic through Oakland is considerably worse. It may not be quite a push between Oakland and San Jose from Walnut Creek, but it is from places like San Ramon and Pleasanton. My basic point was that huge numbers of people in the East Bay will find a weeknight trip to downtown San Jose equal or better than a trip to downtown Oakand;

    “These are just huge and ridiculous lies, streaming forth in a pattern from you. Knowingly falsifying data by huge amounts to try and win arguments is pretty straight up a dickhead move.”

    Dude, get a grip on yourself, lighten up. You might want to increase your meds. Your ranting sounds like a communique from Pyongyang, or a Raiders press release.

    “I don’t know if pointing out someone’s deceit and lack of character is the same thing as actually lacking the character, but if so, then fine, I’m a dickhead too.”

    Again, Mr. Pot, please meet Mr. Kettle.

  63. Just as a technical point, the revenues of a financial services company aren’t directly comparable to those of an industrial. That’s the main reason why Wells Fargo can look as big as Apple when by market cap and net income it isn’t.

  64. How much will the A’s have to pay in return for territorial rights if they move to San Jose? I do know the Giants are not just going to give that away. Lou might have the funding, equity, and sources of revenue but he does not have permission. The cost of acquiring permission might throw off Mr. Wolff’s business model. The Giants are not going to just let the A’s move on into San Jose.

  65. Ethan,
    It did cost the Giants $0 to acquire Santa Clara County back in 1992.
    I’m thinking the Giants at the most will get $40 million and perhaps guaranteed franchise value and revenue through 2017; the year their mortgage payments sunset.
    After 2017 the Giants automatically get a $20 million annual “bonus.”

  66. “You DO play loose with facts. You’re constantly trying to represent SF statistics as if they were Oakland’s.”

    SF and Oakland are connected by a Bridge. From the farthest western edge of SF at the Pacific Ocean to the farthest eastern edge of Oakland on Skyline, it’s about the same distance as downtown San Jose to Palo Alto. Your constant attempts to paint these cities as completely separate “regions” is just absurd. Many of the top execs at Wells Fargo LIVE in Oakland, Berkeley, Piedmont, Orinda, etc. I’m pretty certain that more customers and more employees of the company LIVE in the East Bay than in SF. It’s the same for nearly every other company in the Financial District. The SF Financial District is simply the “business park” for the 4+ million people in this densely populated region. This was a large and wealthy enough region to become a two-team market in the 60s, and it is more so today. And unlike you, I’ve never tried to build a mote and fictionally isolate anything. I’ve always gone out of my way to try and include the portions of San Mateo and Alameda counties which are tied to Silicon Valley by proximity and economics, when looking at the demographics–you know, the sort of effort at understanding the Bay Area that you go out of your way to avoid.

  67. @baycommuter: I’m not aware of the technical difference between revenues of companies selling different products. Please help me out and explain.

  68. @thisplanetsux: I think you should take a break. It’s understood you really, really, really want the A’s to stay in Oakland and you really, really, really hate San Jose, but the reality is that you’re really, really, really chasing your own tail here. All you’re doing is antagonizing people and embarrassing yourself. “SF and Oakland connected by a bridge”? Well, yeah.

    What you ought to do is crunch numbers and prove that San Jose won’t work. IMO, the A’s are vulnerable from a debt service standpoint if they move to San Jose and they don’t get sellouts all of the time. This is especially true if they end up agreeing to pay an extortionate amount to the Giants. Thtat’s the vulnerability you might be able to exploit to pump up Oakland. But you have to understand: the A’s under current ownership will not build a ballpark in Oakland. Period. That’s a dry hole for you and you need to quit drilling. if you want to keep the A’s in Oakland, you need to find someone to build a park for them in Oakland. Or you need to find new owners who will do it. How many times do you need to hear it? The current ownership will not pay to build a new park in Oakland. And you guys sure don’t enhance the possibility of the ownership’s changing its mind with your name calling.

    You want Oakland? Find the money, man. San Jose has found the money. What is there about this that guys like you don’t understand? You don’t want to drive to San Jose? You guys keep screwing around, you’ll be driving to Vegas or New Jersey or North Carolina. Damn, both “New York” football teams play in another state; you guys bitch about a 30-minute drive down a freeway. You’re unserious people.

  69. tps: Sure, let’s see if I can give a clear explanation. If you look at the income statement of an industrial company, it will have a line for gross revenue, which is mostly what you’d call “sales.” This is the top line, and the market will value the company according to it as well as the bottom line (net income). But iIf you look at the income statement for a financial services company, revenue will be broken down into two components– net interest income and non-interest income. Net interest income has virtually no relation to sales– it is the difference between the revenues generated by interest-bearing assets and the cost of servicing interest-burdened liabilities.
    A financial services company has some degree of control over net interest income by taking more risk, typically, by lending long-term and taking in short-term deposits (positive duration gap). This is basically how they make money, but if it can also cause a serious problem in certain interest-rate environments.
    Thus, for a financial, higher revenue isn’t always a good thing, whereas for an industrial, it usually is. Financials tend to trade at lower P/E ratios because their net income is heavily dependent on net interest margin, which the company has very little control over.

  70. @Old Blue: You have no basis to insult me for being selfish or simple-minded. I don’t live in the East Bay, this isn’t about my drive time. I’m equidistant from Oakland and San Jose out on the San Mateo Coast. I’m a diehard, and will make the trip where ever. I prefer going to downtown Oakland over downtown San Jose, for the scenery, the weather, proximity to nightlife in SF and Oakland, that much is all true. I have misgivings about San Jose in general, and the South Diridon plan in particular, which I’ve stated. I think the slow, painful process MLB is currently undertaking reflects similar misgivings on their part. I sincerely think we’d all get a ballpark sooner with a full effort by the A’s to build in Oakland. I understand they don’t want to build in Oakland, but in that case, THEY are to blame for the delay. They knew going in that San Jose would be a very slow process, and THEY burned their bridges in Oakland before San Jose was even possible. I’ve stated all that. And when I state these things, I typically get numerous responses from people that are wildly inaccurate on many different scores. That’s fine, I ignore some, I respond to some, no big deal. But there are a few semi-regular contributors here that seem hell-bent on countering every statement that conceivably favors Oakland or disfavors San Jose with some exaggerated, false, or at least dubious “facts” while also implying that I’m trying to spreading bad info, or else am just plain crazy. So I confront them directly for their dishonest efforts. If Bartleby hadn’t accused me of being way wrong and intellectually dishonest about things many times, while he was “accidentally” doubling, tripling, quadrupling numbers to help him make those insults, I’d never have had said boo to him. Anyways, I’m a high-tech entrepreneur, I’ve put three kids through college, and I don’t need your advice on how to conduct myself. But thanks.

  71. @ML and others– FWIW, I heard a little snippet of Giants’ President Larry Bear on KCBS radio yesterday that peaked my interest. There’s the entire 28 minute interview on their website linked here below. Good interview, even though I hate the G’s. A’s/TR’s/Ballpark talk runs from 17:30 to the 22:00 minute mark.
    Just a few highlights:
    LB:We believe they (A’s) need a new ballpark, not a new territory.
    There’s no precedent stripping a team of it’s territory.
    The commissioner has never indicated to us that the territorial right that we have is in jeopardy or in doubt.

  72. @jk-usa – I cleaned up your link. Thanks for finding this.

    When asked how the Giants would be harmed, Baer says that the Bay is a barrier and that people tend to travel in a north-south direction. That is complete, utter BS. What he doesn’t say is that the Giants have effectively siphoned East Bay fans due to China Basin’s better accessibility.

  73. @ML–no problem. I do what I can to contribute to this site, even though I’m not too popular on here. Thanks for cleaning up link. No sure how to do that.

  74. Baer says there is no precedence for stripping a team of it’s territory… they won’t be stripped of it…just required to share it like all other 2 team markets

  75. @jk-usa — Good find. None of us who want the A’s to stay in Oakland, are popular on this site. Don’t take any of it personal.

  76. Baer seems to want to forget that there is precedent for one team gifting territorial rights to another.

  77. My apologies RM for my tone re: Larry Baer. Its easy for us here to become extremely irate when the Giants brass talks about the A’s, San Jose and T-Rights.
    But a the end of the day take comfort in the fact that it will be Selig’s and MLB’s decision for the A’s, not the Giants.
    Would love to see Baer’s face when the good news is finally uttered.

  78. “SF and Oakland are connected by a Bridge.”

    Yes, I get that. And SF and San Jose are connected by a freeway. Both are paved, and can be used by cars for driving. I get all that.

    The bridge is a huge DISADVANTAGE for Oakland, because it’s a monumental chokepoint for traffic at the most critical time for getting people to a ballgame.

    “From the farthest western edge of SF at the Pacific Ocean to the farthest eastern edge of Oakland on Skyline, it’s about the same distance as downtown San Jose to Palo Alto. Your constant attempts to paint these cities as completely separate “regions” is just absurd.”

    See, now here’s you at your most disingenuous. I have to believe you understand that the relevant statistic is not distance, it’s drive time. Getting out of the City during rush hour is excruciating no matter which direction you’re going. Just last week, it took me literally an hour from Pacific Heights just to get on the freeway heading home. From past experience, I believe if I had been unlucky enough to have been going over the Bay Bridge it could have taken me another hour to get to downtown Oakland. Your argument fails.

    “Many of the top execs at Wells Fargo LIVE in Oakland, Berkeley, Piedmont, Orinda, etc. I’m pretty certain that more customers and more employees of the company LIVE in the East Bay than in SF.”

    First of all, this is you guessing. Second of all, however many employees and customers Wells has in the East Bay, they almost certainly have a greater aggregate number of employees and customers in Marin, SF, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties. Meaning, a trip to the East Bay during rush hour is going to be massively inconvenient for the majority of their employees and customers.

    They might go ahead and buy tickets anyway, if the A’s were the only team in the area. They’re not. Wells has a beautiful ballpark within walking distance of their office in San Francisco, which is relatively convenient for all their employees and customers. What on earth is their motivation for making a long term commitment to buy 81 games of premium seating in Oakland?

    “This was a large and wealthy enough region to become a two-team market in the 60s, and it is more so today.”

    First, the original move to make this a two-team market is considered a mistake by MLB. Both teams struggled with attendance for much of their history as a result. The Bay Area is by far the smallest two team market in MLB.

    Second, this is not the ’60s. In the ’60s, all that mattered was butts in the seats. There was no premium seating, and the difference between the top priced ticket and the bottom priced ticket. Today, premium seating drives gate revenue, and is likely the difference between profitability and non-profitability for many teams (at least before considering league subsidies), even the ones playing in publicly-financed buildings. The Giants financed their ballpark largely on the back of long-term commitments to buy premium-seating and PSL-bearing “charter seating.” While exact figures are not publicly available, based on the amount of premium-seat inventory the Giants have and their published pricing it seems a good guess that this revenue may account for as much as half the gate.

    Bottom line, the East Bay simply does not have the corporate base to finance a privately-financed ballpark in direct competition with AT&T only eight miles away. All the people with a financial stake in this (the ones with real data, and not just taking educated guesses based in what they can find on the web), have drawn this conclusion. If there was the slightest bit of validity to your arguments, the Giants would be terrified of a VC ballpark and would be paying the A’s moving expenses to San Jose.

    “And unlike you, I’ve never tried to build a mote and fictionally isolate anything. I’ve always gone out of my way to try and include the portions of San Mateo and Alameda counties which are tied to Silicon Valley by proximity and economics, when looking at the demographics–you know, the sort of effort at understanding the Bay Area that you go out of your way to avoid.”

    Horseshit. Your arguments constantly run like this: “No one from the East Bay will come to games in San Jose because the drive is too far. But wealthy VCs and execs from Sand Hill Road and Page Mill Road will regularly drag their important clients through two hours of Dumbarton Bridge traffic to go see games in Oakland.”

    You also persistently ignore the fact that a San Jose ballpark would be far more convenient for East Bay people than an Oakland ballpark would be for South Bay people, for several reasons: First, rush hour traffic is going the other way. Second, a huge number of East Bay people work in the South Bay. Third, no one would have to cross a bridge.

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