Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Miami to turn into 'Super Bowl City'

- By Greg Cote Miami Herald

MIAMI – The idiom of dangling a carrot in front of one's nose sees its extreme in the NFL dangling the prospect of hosting Super Bowls in front of wide-eyed cities.

The perfume is powerful enough to move mountains, to see local government­s genuflect, to get new stadiums built.

In Miami, it was powerful enough to convince Stephen Ross to part with $350 million. And the result is South Florida's transforma­tion to "Super Bowl City" – a place at the center of the NFL universe.

If he hadn't, the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers would not be headed to Miami, where the eyes of the world will be fixed on the biggest sporting event in America on Feb. 2.

Miami and his Hard Rock Stadium are only hosting the city's record-setting 11th Super Bowl this season because Ross made that commitment. The NFL had made that clear.

"Our stadium wasn't modern and up to date and it really wasn't a showcase," as Ross put it. "The league said they weren't coming back to Miami unless we did upgrade the stadium."

Ross, the Miami Dolphins owner, spent more than a third of a billion dollars in a privately funded 2015-16 facelift of the stadium Joe Robbie had built (also privately funded) in 1987. That is why Miami ended its 10year drought, after previously last hosting a Super Bowl following the 2009 season, and earned the distinctio­n of hosting the Super Bowl 54 game that will crown and cap the league's 100th season.

––– With this 11th Super Bowl – five in the old Orange Bowl and this will be the sixth time in what is now Hard Rock, in the suburb of Miami Gardens – Greater Miami breaks a tie and surpasses New Orleans' 10 for the most ever, with Pasadena a distant third place with five Super Bowls hosted.

Add this to Miami's claim to the title "Super Bowl City": The Dolphins' five Super Bowl team appearance­s mean 16 of the first 54 SBS (or 30 percent) will have involved Miami as host or participan­t, comfortabl­y the most of any city or region.

But Miami as a Super Bowl destinatio­n had dried up after the 2010 game, perhaps permanentl­y.

"Until Ross decided to write the big check," said Rodney Barreto, chairman of the Miami Super Bowl Host Committee since 1988. "That got us back in the game."

The massive makeover featured giant video boards in the four inside corners of the stadium, additional suites, and an open-air canopy over the main seating areas. In the redesign capacity was reduced by around 10,000, to roughly 65,500, but the higher percentage of premium seating meant overall revenue increases for Ross (and for the NFL putting Super Bowls here) even with the lower maximum attendance.

Ross funded the 20-month renovation for a number of reasons.

It would benefit his Dolphins and other main tenant, Hurricanes football. It would attract the major annual Miami Open tennis tournament. It would bring the College Football Playoff (HRS hosts the 2020 season national championsh­ip game). It would attract major music concerts like the Rolling Stones. It would lure one-off big events like Wrestleman­ia. And it would create a destinatio­n for major internatio­nal soccer including, Ross expects, 2026 World Cup matches here.

Mostly, though, Ross' financial investment was made with Super Bowls in mind. With getting Miami back in the rotation.

"That weighed a lot," he says. "I'm hoping we'll have a Super Bowl at least once every five years. The cities in the rotation all the time should be Miami and Los Angeles."

––– Miami hosted three of the first five Super Bowls, so South Florida and the promise of postcard weather were appealing to the NFL from the start.

But the league's interest in Miami began to sag as the aging Orange Bowl did the same, and it took Robbie building his brand new stadium to rekindle the league's interest – just as decades later it would take Ross' massive makeover of the The House That Joe Built to get the NFL'S attention back.

Every Super Bowl is history making, and the 10 in Miami have not fallen short. In the briefest chronology, we have hosted:

The triumph that would end the Vince Lombardi/packers dynasty (1968); the Jets stunningly fulfilling Joe Namath's "guarantee" (1969); the Colts winning it all the first season after Don Shula had left for Miami (1971); the Steelers winning their second for four Super Bowls within six years (1976); Terry Bradshaw back for Pittsburgh's third of four titles (1979); the 49ers reigning on two Joe Montana fourth-quarter touchdowns (1989); the Niners on top again, this time with Steve Young (1995); Denver and John Elway going back-to-back (1999); Peyton Manning leading the Colts to his first championsh­ip (2007); and New Orleans winning its first Super Bowl to lift a city still recovering from Hurricane Katrina (2010).

The 2007 game was Miami's only Super Bowl bothered by bad weather, but even that was sort of a win. I mean, who can ever forget the late, great Prince singing "Purple Rain" in a driving deluge – for many perhaps the most memorable halftime show of them all.

The next four Super Bowls after this one already are committed – to Tampa, to Inglewood, California (the new Los Angeles Stadium at Hollywood Park), to Glendale, Arizona, then back to New Orleans.

Will Miami bid for the next available SB in February 2025?

 ?? Super Bowl LIVE/TNS ?? An artist rendering of Super Bowl Live, which will be staged at Miami's Bayfront Park Jan. 25-Feb. 1.
Super Bowl LIVE/TNS An artist rendering of Super Bowl Live, which will be staged at Miami's Bayfront Park Jan. 25-Feb. 1.

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