The Niagara Falls Review

Tampa teams soar, fans watch from afar

Lightning, Rays and Bucs miss a chance to truly capitalize on successes

- FRED GOODALL

TAMPA, FLA. — This has been a year for Tampa Bay sports like no other, though the area’s three successful profession­al franchises haven’t had a chance to truly capitalize on the boom and energize pockets of a fan base that in recent years have earned the tag of front-runners.

It has been — and continues to be — a missed opportunit­y because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“As fans, you can’t ask for much more, and you couldn’t be prouder of all the teams,” said Hall of Fame linebacker and former Tampa Bay Buccaneers star Derrick Brooks. “You feel for them, though, not being able to go to the games and enjoy winning that much more.”

> The Bucs, who usually rank near the bottom of the National Football League in attendance, are off to their best start in a decade behind quarterbac­k Tom Brady. But they are restricted from filling thousands of seats ecstatic fans rushed to buy after the six-time Super Bowl champ signed a two-year, $50-million (U.S.) contract with the team in March.

> The Lightning, a young, talent-laden hockey team that’s sold out every home game for the past five years, won a second Stanley Cup title but were forced to make their entire playoff run on neutral ice in Canada. They haven’t been able to celebrate their first crown since 2004 in a traditiona­l way.

> The Rays, whose attendance woes across the Bay in St. Petersburg have ownership pondering splitting future home schedules between Florida and

Montreal, hosted two playoff games at Tropicana Field in front of a limited number of family and friends before heading to San Diego and Arlington, Texas, for the rest of a journey to the World Series.

Brooks knows what fans are missing.

The 2002 NFL defensive player of the year led the Bucs to their only Super Bowl title 18 seasons ago and will never forget returning to Tampa with the Lombardi Trophy to celebrate with the community.

“A blast,” Brooks recalled. “The passion, the pride was unbelievab­le. Winning a championsh­ip gave the whole city a sense of accomplish­ment.”

With Brady leading the way, the Bucs are excited about the prospect of ending a long playoff drought and maybe even becoming the first franchise to appear in a Super Bowl played in its home stadium.

For Brooks, co-chair of the Tampa organizing committee hosting the NFL title game as well as an executive vice-president with the Lightning, that would be a storybook finish to a year like none other for the area’s sports teams.

But it will be little respite for disappoint­ed fans forced to follow the simultaneo­us success of the Bucs, Lightning and Rays from afar due to coronaviru­s pandemic restrictio­ns that have limited attendance.

The restrictio­ns have kept Brady from packing the stands at Raymond James Stadium, the Lightning from extending a five-year, 235-game string of consecutiv­e sellouts at Amalie Arena, and the Rays from filling normally empty seats at Tropicana Field during a deep playoff run that ended with the AL champions losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.

Tampa Bay ranked 30th among the NFL’s 32 teams in home attendance in 2019, averaging 51,898 per game.

Adding Brady not only heightened expectatio­ns for winning but filling 65,618-seat Raymond James Stadium, where a limited number of fans have been allowed for two of the three home games they’ve played so far this season.

Attendance was announced as 6,383 for a “soft” opening against the Los Angeles Chargers on Oct. 4 and 15,540 vs. the

Green Bay Packers two weeks later.

But Rob Higgins, executive director of the Tampa Bay Sports Commission, said all is not lost. The success of the area’s three major profession­al sports teams, he noted, has been a boom for the community’s image and figures to help a sagging tourism industry down the road.

Tampa toasted the Lightning with a boat parade on the Hillsborou­gh River, followed by an outdoor celebratio­n that drew about 16,000 socially-distanced fans to Raymond James Stadium, where the Stanley Cup has made two appearance­s in the past month.

Brooks, whose title with the Lightning is executive vicepresid­ent of corporate and community developmen­t, offered a glass-half-full perspectiv­e on the NHL team not being able to celebrate its accomplish­ment in a traditiona­l way because of the pandemic.

The Lightning began their playoff run in the NHL bubble in Toronto. They finished up in Edmonton, where they defeated the Dallas Stars in the Stanley Cup final.

“They did something no other team has done,” Brooks said. “It was a unique experience up there, and they were able to enjoy it with one another. Under the circumstan­ces, with all they endured, I think that was needed.

“I look back at winning the Super Bowl. I never really had a chance to celebrate in the moment with my teammates. Everybody’s focus was on running round trying to find family,” Brooks added. “It was just them up there. Nobody else was around. That was special.”

It may have been special, but certainly not ideal for the Tampa sports scene.

 ?? DIRK SHADD TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? At 6-2, including a win over Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers, the Buccaneers appear ready to snap their long playoff drought and hope to play a Super Bowl in their home stadium.
DIRK SHADD TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTO At 6-2, including a win over Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers, the Buccaneers appear ready to snap their long playoff drought and hope to play a Super Bowl in their home stadium.

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