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What if the Rays were allowed to have TWO hometowns?


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It's a crazy idea, but it is being thought of. I post this here, because it would affect the Orioles. Imagine a team having media revenues from two different media markets. I thought it was interesting enough and a change of scenery from the Gallardo/Fowler talk.

There?s an outside-the-box idea circulating in Canada, reports*Francois Cardinal from La Presse*(link in French) ? business interests could buy half of the*Raysand have them*split their home games between the Tampa area and Montreal. The*Tampa Bay Times? Marc Topkin*has a summary of the plan. Having the team be based in two cities could potentially allow it to maximize television revenue, as games would be broadcast in both markets. Also, per-game attendance would increase because there would be fewer games in each city. Team-related income would be split between both ownership groups. Of course, Cardinal?s idea is*far from reality*at this point, and there are practical problems, like where in each city the Rays (who are currently trying to find a new stadium site in Tampa Bay) would play, and (as Topkin notes) whether the players*association*would approve of the*arrangement, given the logistical difficulties it would presumably cause players.
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It's a crazy idea, but it is being thought of. I post this here, because it would affect the Orioles. Imagine a team having media revenues from two different media markets. I thought it was interesting enough and a change of scenery from the Gallardo/Fowler talk.

While I don't see it happening, it isn't necessarily a "crazy" idea.

The Packers played almost half of their home games (3 out of 7) in Milwaukee from 1961-1977, and continued to play 3 out of 8 home games in Milwaukee from 1978 through 1994.

Have a greenie for the adroit/clever thinking.

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While I don't see it happening, it isn't necessarily a "crazy" idea.

The Packers played almost half of their home games (3 out of 7) in Milwaukee from 1961-1977, and continued to play 3 out of 8 home games in Milwaukee from 1978 through 1994.

Have a greenie for the adroit/clever thinking.

Big difference without big money local cable deals.

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While I don't see it happening, it isn't necessarily a "crazy" idea.

The Packers played almost half of their home games (3 out of 7) in Milwaukee from 1961-1977, and continued to play 3 out of 8 home games in Milwaukee from 1978 through 1994.

Have a greenie for the adroit/clever thinking.

Big difference without big money local cable deals.

Yep.

That's one reason why I said that I don't see it happening.

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o

And while we're on the subject of strange set-ups for home games, that reminds me ...... in 2012, the AAA-Scranton Yankees played their entire season on the road while their home stadium was being renovated. :eektf:

Triple-A Yankees to Play Entire Season on the Road

(By Billy Byler)

http://chronicle.augusta.com/sports/baseball/2012-04-21/yankees-triple-play-entire-season-road

Technically, the AAA-Yankees still played half of their games "at home" ...... they split time between Frontier Field in Rochester, N.Y., and a couple of other stadiums in the northeast, but they were essentially homeless for the season.

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It's a crazy idea, but it is being thought of. I post this here, because it would affect the Orioles. Imagine a team having media revenues from two different media markets. I thought it was interesting enough and a change of scenery from the Gallardo/Fowler talk.

:scratchchinhmm:

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That would be an unfair competitive advantage and I don't see any way that MLB would allow it

Two markets with historically dubious support. The two cities put together, and assuming Montreal gets a cable deal for the entirety of Quebec, they'd barely edge out Boston, Philadelphia, or the Texas teams in population and likely still lag way behind in revenue. They'd be dwarfed by New York or LA, even with two teams in those markets.

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