GenerationW
Senior Member
The first Grey Cup in Winnipeg was held in 1991, the second in 1998, and the third and most recent one was in 2006. It wasn't the 1999 Pan Am upgrades that "allowed" Winnipeg to host any of them, but rather the construction of temporary seating for all three Cups.They only spent $141million in 1999.
From what I can gather (mostly from wikipedia, which if you were curious about the lasting benefits of Winnipeg's Pan-Ams, you could have done yourself), they upgraded Winnipeg Stadium (which allowed them to host the Grey Cup for the first time two years later and again in 96), they built the U of M athletic centre which is the home to the national training centre for volleyball and basketball.
First and foremost we're a Canadian city just like them, but more on this later....We're in another echelon and should have some greater expectations I think.
Here is what Wiki says about the '99 games:
Pretty awe-inspiring stuff. Counting the days here until these b-list games begin with d-list athletes!The 13th Pan American Games were held in Winnipeg, Canada, from 23 July to 8 August 1999 for the second time, after the 1967 edition of the multi-sports event.
The budget for the event for $141 million, which was provided by the federal, provincial, and municipal governments of Canada. [1]
The Games recorded a $6M profit [2] that funded legacy type projects.[citation needed]
Hosts Canada celebrated its medal haul, which was the second best after the United States. However, some considered Canada's results overrated, since the US amassed the most medals with a mostly second-string team while Canada and Cuba had fielded their top national athletes. Cuba also managed more golds than Canada, despite having a smaller roster.
Frequent comparisons[citation needed] were made to the 1967 games, where the United States had fielded many rising stars, such as Mark Spitz. By comparison, the Americans had sent their "B" team in 1999. No major US networks covered the Games, while newspapers only sent second-string reporters instead and the stories never made front page news. Many high profile athletes, of all nationalities, such as US champion sprinters were in Europe during these Pan Am games, taking part in professional events. South American nations (with the exception of Uruguay) did not send their under-23 male soccer teams after the organizing committee refused to pay appearance money to CONMEBOL.[citation needed]
The competition was also marred by a total of 7 positive drug tests.
So one major goal is to make more than Winnipeg's $6 million, and the gauntlet has been thrown that it should be much more seeing as how Toronto is somehow blessed to be in a special "echelon". Can't wait for the final tally.