Truro News

Draft had economic impact of almost US$95 million for Philly

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April’s NFL draft had an economic impact of almost US$95 million for Philadelph­ia.

According to a report commission­ed by the Philadelph­ia Convention and Visitors Bureau and conducted by Temple University’s Sport Industry Research Center, direct spending during the three-day event in April was $56.1 million.

Temple’s survey showed the draft attracted attendees from 42 states. Proceeding­s were held at the city’s iconic Art Museum, with the Rocky statue at the top of its steps, and drew a record 250,000 attendees.

“When we chose to pursue the draft, we did so with the goal of an economic win for our city and region,” says Julie Coker Graham, PHLCVB President and CEO. “We are thrilled that not only did it generate substantia­l economic activity for Philadelph­ia, but we were also successful in showing the world that this city is a premier destinatio­n for sports, big events and tourism in general.”

The NFL began moving the draft around the nation in 2015, going to Chicago for two years. Philadelph­ia was next, and 20 cities, including Philly, have expressed interest in hosting an upcoming draft. Representa­tives from 16 cities attended this year’s event.

“Philadelph­ia was a great partner and the Eagles were with us from the beginning,” says Peter O’Reilly, the league’s senior vicepresid­ent of events.

“We were able to create a footprint right in the heart of the city. We didn’t have the separate theatre and fan festival, we brought it all together as one and in an iconic setting, and allowing so many people to feel connected to this draft.

“Obviously Chicago set the bar for the new draft model and Philadelph­ia took it to another level in terms of the energy and the site and connection to the crowd.”

So the draft will return to Philly next year, right Peter?

O’Reilly chuckled while demurring as the bidding process continues.

“We have that option to return to Philly, and they did help us create an extraordin­ary event,” he says. “We’ll be announcing a site sometime in the fall. One of the reasons we’re being methodical is we learned a lot from Philadelph­ia this year, and other cities are learning about how they might best showcase their city, tied to a draft. It has piqued or sparked people in cities with ideas around how you can do something.”

After 93 per cent of visitors surveyed cited the draft as their primary reason for visiting Philly, 79 per cent said they would recommend Philadelph­ia as a travel destinatio­n, and 62 per cent intended to return to Philadelph­ia for a vacation within the next 12 months.

“Overall, the event performed incredibly well across multiple key metrics, including the opportunit­y to once again position Philadelph­ia as a premier U.S. destinatio­n,” Coker Graham says. “The economic impact that the draft generated was similar to other large-scale marquee events we have hosted of that size and scale.”

Altogether, more than 30,000 jobs (914 full-time equivalent positions) were supported by the draft, which helped generate $38.5 million in personal income, $7.9 million in state and local taxes.

“The draft,” O’Reilly says, “now stands as one of the major events on the sports calendar.” Jon Jones could be facing a multiyear suspension after the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency notified the UFC light heavyweigh­t champion of a potential violation of the promotion’s anti-doping policy.

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AP PHOTO

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