Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

GREEN WITH ENVY

Showplace in Charlotte shows 51s what they’re missing without new ballpark

- By BETSY HELFAND

When Dan Rajkowski joined the Charlotte Knights in 2005, work was already underway to secure a new stadium. Talks had been on and off since the late 1990s.

And yet, Rajkowski — now the team’s executive vice president and COO — and the Knights faced a “litany of things” as they tried to get BB&T Ballpark built.

The ballpark, which finally opened in 2014, was financed through a privatepub­lic partnershi­p and cost $54 million. It is one of the newest and, by all accounts, nicest in Triple-A baseball.

Wednesday, it was on full display as the Knights hosted the Triple-A All-Star Game, providing both a stark contrast from Cashman Field, which opened in 1983, and some tips for the 51s as they continue their push for a new stadium, which they hope will open in 2018.

Like in Charlotte, the 51s hope to use a private-public partnershi­p for a new park which would cost around $60 million. As they prepare for a new stadium of their own, they’ve looked to teams with recently built stadiums, like Charlotte and El Paso, for advice.

Problems with Cashman Field — from sewage overflow to a lack of outdoor batting cages and beyond — have been widely documented, though Pacific Coast League President Branch Rickey said he thought the issue was less about Cashman itself as it is about what other stadiums have to offer.

“You can’t compare the stadiums of yore, the stadiums of olden days to the stadiums of today put in the right spot,” Rickey said as he looked around a club level packed with fans, young and old,

taking in the All-Star Game. “You can’t compare them. It’s apples and oranges and there are people in Las Vegas that don’t have this 72 dates a year.”

“This,” is a state-of-the-art facility that has helped moved the Knights from being one of the worst-drawing teams in the league when they were in Fort Mill, South Carolina, to one of the best. The Knights averaged 3,803 fans per game in 2013. The next season, that number jumped to 9,686 when BB&T Ballpark opened.

Nestled in the middle of Charlotte with city buildings shooting up beyond the outfield, 51s third baseman T.J. Rivera called the park the nicest he’s played in throughout his minor league career, saying the backdrop felt like something a big league stadium would have.

Before the stadium was built, Rajkowski predicted the Knights would draw 600,000 fans per season and he remembers people looking back at him as if he was crazy.

“I had to really battle that but I believed 600 and I admit today I was wrong. We drew 680 and 660 the next year. We should consistent­ly do that,” Rajkowski said. “(Las Vegas has) a lot of similar challenges. Big city, major city, major league sports thinking, but they would jump to the top of the Pacific Coast League in attendance.”

The 51s currently draw 4,979 fans per game, which is 26th overall of 30 Triple-A teams. At 8,957, Charlotte is first overall.

“How would Las Vegas fail to do what we are doing in El Paso and Charlotte and in Sacramento and in Columbus, Ohio?” Rickey said. “Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvan­ia. Just look around Triple-A.”

As they attempt to re-create the success teams like Charlotte and El Paso have had with their new parks, 51s leaders, including president and COO Don Logan, as well as representa­tives from the Howard Hughes Corporatio­n took a trip to both stadiums last year.

One of the big things that has led to the success of BB&T Ballpark is the location of the park. After the stadium was built, Rajkowski estimated there were 1,500 apartment units created that were directly associated with the ballpark as the area became even more developed.

The 51s stadium would move the other way — from downtown to the suburbs, with Summerlin as the new park’s location.

“There’s a saying about (how) you have to fish where the fish are,” MILB President and CEO Pat O’Conner said. “You want a place that’s easy to get to, attractive to get to, convenient to get to and in your case in Las Vegas, that’s probably not downtown.”

Logan believes the proposed Summerlin location would have the “nicest compatible uses around the stadium,” in the league as the park would be near restaurant­s, shopping, movie theaters and the Red Rock Hotel Casino.

And from talking to those who have been through the process before him, like Rajkowski in Charlotte, Logan is confident the 51s know what needs to be built to help bring about a resurgence — whenever that time comes.

“It’ll be built right. There will be shade, the cooling system will work for the summertime, we’ll have suites, we’ll have a club area like this, we’ll have party decks,” Logan said. “This is awesome. It’s got something for everybody. That’s kind of what you want to do. You want to appeal to the whole market, everybody.” Continued from Page 1C

 ?? JEFF SINER/THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER ?? With a faint rainbow overhead, the skyline of Charlotte, N.C., provides a thriving backdrop for the Home Run Derby during the Triple-A All-Star Game festivitie­s Monday at BB&T Ballpark. The stadium, which opened in 2014, has fueled an attendance boom...
JEFF SINER/THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER With a faint rainbow overhead, the skyline of Charlotte, N.C., provides a thriving backdrop for the Home Run Derby during the Triple-A All-Star Game festivitie­s Monday at BB&T Ballpark. The stadium, which opened in 2014, has fueled an attendance boom...
 ??  ?? Travis Taijeron of the 51s bumps fists with Pacific Coast League teammates during player introducti­ons at the Triple-A All-Star Game on Wednesday at BB&T Ballpark in Charlotte, N.C. A packed house of 10,386 fans watched as Taijeron hit a home run and...
Travis Taijeron of the 51s bumps fists with Pacific Coast League teammates during player introducti­ons at the Triple-A All-Star Game on Wednesday at BB&T Ballpark in Charlotte, N.C. A packed house of 10,386 fans watched as Taijeron hit a home run and...

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