McPeachy said:
Cowduck said:
No they aren't, at least not in basketball. That's what I keep saying. You have no evidence to support this assertion.
There are a BUNCH of examples in football, and several examples in basketball...our own MWC member SDSU basketball comes to mind with Viejas at like 11K versus what they used to play in (I think a 4K seat community arena).
We can argue this forever...but as far as my research would let me seek out, the University of Wyoming is the only D1 football stadium to INTENTIONALLY decrease it's seating capacity in the last decade. And like I said above...everyone around us is growing. Hell even FCS schools are upgrading and adding more seating.
Auburn's brand new basketball arena is actually smaller than the one it replaced - it seats fewer than 10k.
Viejas is not an arena that supports your argument. It's true that it is considerably bigger than the gym it replaced, but that a) isn't saying much at all since the old one was WCC-sized, and b) it is roughly
the same size as a proposed post-renovation AA. Plus it is located in San Diego. Not only does that mean that there is a much larger population base to draw from, it means that it can host A-list concerts and other events regularly. Which it does. How many Lady Gaga or Metallica shows have we hosted at the AA?
And you still don't have an answer for Oregon. They are the vanguard of the modern athletic facilities arms race. You could say a lot of things about that institution but you could never, ever accuse them of "small time thinking" in athletics. That fucking place cost more than twice as much as the arena that Auburn opened at just about exactly the same time. (Incidentally, it is three blocks from the house I lived in my last year there.) They built an arena...
roughly the size of a proposed post-renovation AA.
On-campus, college basketball-first arenas built in the last 10 years (not sure if I'm missing any):
University of Miami - 8,000
Pitt - 12,500
Virginia - 14,593 (also regularly hosts A-list concerts and other events)
Mizzou - 15,601
USC - 10,258
South Carolina - 18,000 (also regularly hosts A-list concerts and other events)
Fresno State - 15.500 (also regularly hosts A-list concerts and other events)
Auburn - 9,600
SDSU - 12,414 (also regularly hosts A-list concerts and other events)
Oregon - 12,369
You might think I'm copping out by excluding SDSU, UVA, S. Carolina, and Fresno from the argument to some degree but big time concerts and such are a major revenue stream that those arenas could count on when they were conceived. You can't reasonably compare venues in large metro areas that were constructed with hosting Springsteen concerts and WWE live events in mind in addition to college hoops to the AA. The Stones, Beyonce, Taylor Swift, etc. are not playing Laramie, ever. That leaves Mizzou, who still has the odd big rock show, as the only school you could possibly argue has set the bar higher than where we're going in terms of capacity. Whoopty doo.
It's also worth mentioning that Washington, Cal, and Stanford all extensively renovated their arenas in the late 90s/early 2000s and none of them seat more than a shade over 10,000. Those are all very large Western institutions with solid-to-excellent basketball programs, huge metropolitan areas, and extremely deep pockets. Oregon State just renovated their arena and reduced seating from 10,400 to 9,600.
And you still haven't answered the cold, hard data with respect the AA's own attendance history. 15 sellouts in 30 years?
I won't address the War much because this thread is about basketball and there are much different factors in play with football. But it isn't like we've regularly been selling that place out, and it isn't like we've reduced seating capacity in a way that prevents us from a) generating more revenue overall, or b) substantially expanding it should we ever, you know, justify said expansion by winning and selling it out on days Texas or Nebraska aren't in the house.