Mariner35
New Member
Hamilton's best bet may be to go all in on a PWHL team. If the Takeover Game does well and with Ottawa likely looking for a new home, the Hammer maybe a great spot for a team to flourish.I think Hamilton is effectively a greater-than-800k market for things like large concerts and other events, but less-than-800k for something like the AHL or OHL.
The $300 million reno is huge. It is certainly much better than the initially proposed $50 million (or somewhat more) when HUPEG was on its own. And it is a zillion times better than the idea that was floated for Hamilton's main arena to be a 6000 seat building at Lime Ridge Mall. And they have added a ton of bells and whistles. (And it will be nice to be rid of that embarrassing old scoreboard with whatever replaces it.)
My own biggest concern with the building is that it is simply space-limited no matter what you do with it. A comfortable building with an NHL capacity is typically over 600,000 square feet and TD has 450,000 or so. I hope that it now has a net increase in space to accommodate internal traffic flow.
Maybe neither here nor there, but the actual projected main arena cost for Calgary is "only" $800 million out of that $1.2 billion, and it had been estimated to be $600 million a couple of years back. The OVG people consider TD to be $150 million to $200 million in original structural value plus the reno, so TD might be a $450 million building compared to Calgary's $800 million.
The biggest emotional pain point is that while this reno is extensive and a great thing for Hamilton and way better than most of us had expected, it feels like a permanent closure to the NHL dream. That door may have been closed already, but this feels like official admission. I guess never say never though.
The Forge have done well, considering the overall state of the CPL, and I could see Hamilton really latching on to a team in the PW.
NHL would be huge obviously but if Hamilton becomes a place where leagues with smaller footprints can thrive I think it makes them a great alternative to Toronto, the city with 1000 sports teams.