Reusse: Unlike the Gophers’ coaching situation, the solution for Williams Arena is simple: Blow up The Barn

There have been substantial changes in the last 5 years with regards to College Basketball and attendance of live events in general that go well beyond the Gophers on court success.

- Cost
- NIL
- Portal
- Bigger better TVs
- Conference Realignment/Expansion

Those are big ones. Revenue sharing is looming.

I just don't honestly see the demand for anything really beyond the 10k range or 12k tops.

What exactly is the NCAA Basketball landscape going to look like in 5 to 10 years? Will the NCAA even be around? Will it be replaced by something else or greatly modified?
That’s pretty shortsighted. Yes, there have been changes and we have been largely awful in that time. A total over reaction to go that small
 



That’s pretty shortsighted. Yes, there have been changes and we have been largely awful in that time. A total over reaction to go that small
Fewer games against the traditional regional Big 10 rivals is going to have a lasting impact. Constant roster turnover with less player familiarity (both for the Gophers and opponents) also is a turnoff. Given the cost of attending in person with an HD TV alternative, my opinion is that even if the on court results improve I don't foresee a market to shell out for nosebleed seats. That's my opinion.

It's possible that creating scarcity may increase demand.
 

There have been substantial changes in the last 5 years with regards to College Basketball and attendance of live events in general that go well beyond the Gophers on court success.

- Cost
- NIL
- Portal
- Bigger better TVs
- Conference Realignment/Expansion

Those are big ones. Revenue sharing is looming.

I just don't honestly see the demand for anything really beyond the 10k range or 12k tops.

What exactly is the NCAA Basketball landscape going to look like in 5 to 10 years? Will the NCAA even be around? Will it be replaced by something else or greatly modified?
At best there would be 5-6 games/year you could draw more than 10K (week-end conference home games + Wisconsin/Iowa if during the week.). The other 12 would not. The extra cost is not really justified. Plus a couple of those could be moved to the Wolves arena if they wanted to sell more tickets.
 



At best there would be 5-6 games/year you could draw more than 10K (week-end conference home games + Wisconsin/Iowa if during the week.). The other 12 would not. The extra cost is not really justified. Plus a couple of those could be moved to the Wolves arena if they wanted to sell more tickets.
Agreed. And it is really worth it to do so? Selling an extra 5K in tickets at 3- bucks each (they are going to be bad lower cost seats) only is $150K gross for each of 3-4 games a year tops. And the only way those few games will see more is if the gophers are good, which they have not been in a long time.

10K seats is plenty for a CBB arena.
 





True, multi-use would be a positive, but the culture of Austin, Texas is different than Minneapolis. Not in a good way or bad way. They have a strong music culture - South x Southwest, 6th Street is a poor man's Broadway, Rainey Street District, etc. Austin now hosts the Country Music Awards at the Moody Center. Not saying a new Gopher arena couldn't do the same, just that I don't see Live Nation coming to the U of M and offering the same deal.
The presumed major stake-holder in an arena with modifiable capacity would be the Timberwolves (off campus) not Live Nation or any other concert promoting entity.
 


The presumed major stake-holder in an arena with modifiable capacity would be the Timberwolves (off campus) not Live Nation or any other concert promoting entity.
I see what you are saying.

My pipe dream is that Lore/A Rod bring in the Wilf's and they work out a deal to build an arena down in Eagan around the Vikings facility. I know it is a long shot, but...
 




The solution is simple: kick The PAV out and have basketball take over the entire building. Make Williams Arena whole once again. There will be ample room for renovations.

Marriucci got kicked out and across the street and look at how that turned out.
 

I see what you are saying.

My pipe dream is that Lore/A Rod bring in the Wilf's and they work out a deal to build an arena down in Eagan around the Vikings facility. I know it is a long shot, but...
I don't think the prospect of Lore/ARod (and Bloomberg)-TWolves heading to Eagan is a long short.

I think it would be a much harder sell to have the Gophers join the Wolves in Dakota Cty (beyond a few games if the Boutique On Campus Arena Remodel-Rebuild comes to fruition) as opposed to Downtown MPLS.
 

Agreed. And it is really worth it to do so? Selling an extra 5K in tickets at 3- bucks each (they are going to be bad lower cost seats) only is $150K gross for each of 3-4 games a year tops. And the only way those few games will see more is if the gophers are good, which they have not been in a long time.

10K seats is plenty for a CBB arena.
Meant 30 bucks lol
 


I just watched a youtube video on unusual/weird college basketball arenas. The Barn was one of them. But there are others that aren't exactly what one might consider state of the art. Including Assembly Hall at IU, and arenas at Vanderbilt, Villanova, and the legendary Palestra in Philly. Hinkle, which I always refer to in these discussions is also mentioned. They didn't mention it, but Cameron Indoor isn't exactly a modern entertainment facility. It didn't even have air conditioning until 2002.

I still strongly believe that the building should be saved, unless it's just not realistically possible to financially do so. And that may be the case - that the physical plant and structure just can't be brought up to date, but I think doing a remodel like they did with Hinkle would be great.
 

I just watched a youtube video on unusual/weird college basketball arenas. The Barn was one of them. But there are others that aren't exactly what one might consider state of the art. Including Assembly Hall at IU, and arenas at Vanderbilt, Villanova, and the legendary Palestra in Philly. Hinkle, which I always refer to in these discussions is also mentioned. They didn't mention it, but Cameron Indoor isn't exactly a modern entertainment facility. It didn't even have air conditioning until 2002.

I still strongly believe that the building should be saved, unless it's just not realistically possible to financially do so. And that may be the case - that the physical plant and structure just can't be brought up to date, but I think doing a remodel like they did with Hinkle would be great.
I'm curious; what did it say about Assembly Hall? Architecturally, I consider it a postmodern marvel. Contempoary with the Harry S Truman sports complex, which is now threatened.
 

I'm curious; what did it say about Assembly Hall? Architecturally, I consider it a postmodern marvel. Contempoary with the Harry S Truman sports complex, which is now threatened.
Just that as a sports arena, it's really quite odd in terms of configuration. I guess I didn't even realize how strange it appears with the super steep and high sides and virtually no end seating. Certainly not what anyone would consider modern in terms of sightlines or amenities.

And you mentioned the KC complex - Kaufmann is my favorite MLB stadium by far and I hate the idea that they want to replace it. I think it's nearly perfect in every way. The only stadium I liked more was Milwaukee County.
 

If the U does want to keep the Barn and renovate it, they should look no further than Welsh-Ryan Arena in Evanston for a direction on how to do it right. Norfhwestern gutted the place, reducing capacity and creating better sight lines, expanded the concourses and modernized facilities like bathrooms and concessions and made it an intimate place to watch a game. It’s really nice.
 




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