San Francisco Chronicle

City not much of a gamble anymore

- By Helene Elliott Helene Elliott is a writer for the Los Angeles Times.

LAS VEGAS — When the idea of the NHL coming was still a punchline to jokes about ice existing here only in drinks, an explorator­y ticket drive for a possible team rang up 9,000 seasontick­et deposits in a month.

Last September, three months after the NHL granted its 31st franchise to a group led by businessma­n Bill Foley, the new Las Vegas team decided to cap season tickets at 16,000 to leave some seats for single-game purchases at glitzy T-Mobile Arena.

The NBA summer league, a sleepy, six-team event in its 2004 debut here, drew 24 teams to Thomas & Mack Center and Cox Pavilion this month and set single-game, tournament and championsh­ip-game attendance records.

Thousands of fans waited outside in triple-digit heat to get a glimpse of future stars while a who’s-who of marquee players sat courtside. Among them was LeBron James, apparently as intrigued as everyone else by Lakers rookie Lonzo Ball.

A few miles from those crowds, a vacant lot awaited constructi­on of a domed stadium that will house the Raiders and UNLV’s’ football team by 2020.

Once viewed with caution because of its ties to gambling, Las Vegas is becoming a go-to destinatio­n for profession­al sports leagues and organizati­ons. The traditiona­l local menu of college basketball and boxing is expanding rapidly, and the city just approved a lease agreement for a United Soccer League expansion team to play in 2018 at Cashman Field, home of the Triple-A Las Vegas 51s baseball team.

What happens in Vegas won’t stay in Vegas anymore: It will have an effect around North America and beyond.

“Las Vegas has reinvented hotels, it has reinvented entertainm­ent. It’s reinvented restaurant­s, it’s reinvented convention­s, it’s reinvented the nightclub industry, it’s reinvented retail,” said Ike Lawrence Epstein, senior executive vice president and chief operating officer of UFC. “I think the next thing Las Vegas is going to reinvent is sports.”

First, it had to reinvent its image.

“Vegas historical­ly has had a stigma attached to it vis-a-vis profession­al sports leagues. And I can’t say for sure whether that stigma is entirely gone or whether it continues to exist in some measure,” NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly said. “We ultimately felt … that the cachet kind of outweighs the stigma. I think we view it as a growing, vibrant, fun city and that people are, I think, hungry for profession­al sports because they never really had a chance to experience it on a regular basis.”

UFC recently opened its headquarte­rs in southwest Las Vegas, creating a dazzling Performanc­e Institute for athletes and office space for executives. Its enormous red logo is visible from the 215 Beltway; its existence is something Epstein never could have envisioned as a kid.

“When I grew up here, Vegas was really just UNLV basketball and boxing. That’s it. That’s all we had,” he said. “We didn’t have the Yankees. We didn’t have the Dodgers, these big brands in profession­al sports. So it’s exciting to see what’s happened over the last few years with the hockey team coming here, with UFC and boxing continuing to grow, and this being the center of the combat sports world.”

Soon they can say they live in an NFL city. The Raiders’ arrival will be a watershed moment, putting Las Vegas on the national stage every week instead of just for prize fights or UFC events.

“The Raiders coming is sort of a game-changer,” Epstein said. “Las Vegas is a global brand, and I know one of the reasons why the Golden Knights got an expansion franchise, why the Raiders got approved to come here, is because Las Vegas is an incredible platform to build brands. The NFL, the NHL, and I think the NBA ultimately, we’ve seen it’s a tremendous platform to build your brand and expose it to a much larger audience than sports typically expose themselves to.”

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell shares that vision. “We’re excited about Las Vegas because of the city that it is and the city that it has intentions to become,” he said in March after owners approved the Raiders’ move from Oakland.

Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred recently said that if relocating an existing team were to be discussed, “Las Vegas would be on the list.” Despite overall declining attendance and TV ratings for NASCAR events, Las Vegas Motor Speedway was awarded a second NASCAR Cup Series event in 2018 and will stage two triplehead­er weekends.

And though NBA deputy commission­er Mark Tatum said his league has no plans to expand or move a team here, basketball is already a fixture. The NBA, which staged its 2007 All-Star Game at Thomas & Mack, held board of governors’ and player developmen­t meetings during the summer league.

USA Basketball has used Las Vegas as a base for pre-Olympic training and other events, and four college basketball conference tournament­s were held there last spring.

“Las Vegas is a fantastic market,” Tatum said. “It’s a market that, given the success of our summer league, people here are avid sports fans and there is a community that I have no doubt will support profession­al sports franchises here.”

With a growing metro area population that’s already a little more than 2 million, there’s room for many sports to have a juicy slice of the market.

The number of visitors to Las Vegas reached a high of 42.9 million in 2016, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. The number of convention­s and meetings (21,864) and delegates (more than 6.3 million) also hit highs. McCarran Internatio­nal Airport, located minutes from the Strip, ranks among the 10 busiest airports in North America and top 30 in the world. There were nearly 150,000 hotel and motel rooms in Las Vegas in 2016, giving it the ability to host several massive convention­s and events at once.

When the Golden Knights analyzed their ticket deposit data, they found more than 90 percent were for one to eight seats, indicating demand from individual­s rather than corporatio­ns. About 85 percent were from Las Vegas area codes.

The NHL is more gate-dependent than other leagues, so that was good news.

Epstein said he views the Golden Knights and other new arrivals as partners. “Sports is supposed to be fun. It’s entertainm­ent,” he said. “And what the Golden Knights are doing, and what all of us are doing, is becoming part of the sports entertainm­ent landscape here in Las Vegas.

“People are going to come to Las Vegas to see Celine Dion. They’re going to see Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears. They’re going to go see a concert. They’re also going to go see the Golden Knights. They’re going to come see a UFC fight. They’re going to go see the Raiders. They’re going to go see the NBA franchise that maybe comes here. And that’s going to be people from around the world . ...

“There are great sports towns, but there’s a debate: What’s the best sports city? Boston? New York? But nobody’s talking about what is the global sports city because it doesn’t exist right now. I think there’s an opportunit­y for Las Vegas to be that place. I believe that Las Vegas can be the first truly global sports city, and I think we’re already more than halfway there.”

 ?? Ethan Miller / Getty Images 2016 ?? Pyrotechni­cs and streamers celebrated the revealing of the Golden Knights nickname.
Ethan Miller / Getty Images 2016 Pyrotechni­cs and streamers celebrated the revealing of the Golden Knights nickname.

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