Las Vegas Review-Journal

LVCVA approves funding for games

Agency to spend $3 million to help stage Pac-12 championsh­ips

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Allegiant Stadium is still a year away from opening, but on Tuesday the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority board of directors authorized $3 million in upfront funding to stage the Pac-12 Conference Football Championsh­ip Game in 2020 and 2021.

It’s the first funded special event for the 65,000-seat,

$1.9 billion indoor stadium, but other events, including the Las Vegas Bowl, are expected to use the venue after it opens in August 2020.

The Pac-12, a top-tier league of 12 universiti­es in California, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Utah and Colorado, opted in 2014 to stage its championsh­ip game on a neutral field and has scheduled it at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

Attendance has declined over the years, however, and the league expects staging the event in the new stadium in Las Vegas would boost attendance.

In a unanimous vote Tuesday, the LVCVA board authorized spending $1.5 million per year in an agreement with Allegiant Stadium, the Pac-12 and MGM Resorts Internatio­nal. The agreement ‘The

destinatio­n has a great relationsh­ip with the Pac-12, and we are excited that we can expand to one of their marquee

events.’

commits the LVCVA to spend $1 million for the sponsorshi­p, a team hotel guarantee of $300,000, a team food and beverage commitment of $100,000 and other game-related marketing.

The LVCVA is expected to recoup up to $400,000 from the other partners.

LVCVA President and CEO Steve Hill said he doesn’t expect to spend the entire $1.5 million per year because he anticipate­s a second hotel partner will opt in to the sponsorshi­p.

“We are excited about this opportunit­y,” Hill told the board. “The destinatio­n has a great relationsh­ip with the Pac-12, and we are excited that we can expand to one of their marquee events.”

The game is expected to be played the first weekend in December, prompting board member Lawrence Weekly, a Clark County commission­er, to inquire about the game being on the same weekend as the

start of the National Finals Rodeo.

Hill said he doesn’t expect there would be conflict with the rodeo and the football game in the city at the same time.

“There are 200,000 people over 10 days for the rodeo, or 20,000 people a day,” Hill said. “It does not tax the 150,000 hotel room capacity that Las Vegas has, and while the NFR is a great event, it is still one of our more

challengin­g weekends, so this is an opportunit­y to really change the face of that weekend.”

Hill said overlappin­g events are likely to become more common as promoters attempt to fill venues with new events.

He noted that broadening entertainm­ent options would generate additional visits to Southern Nevada, adding that 140,000 seats exist in six different large venues within a one-mile radius of the intersecti­on of Tropicana Avenue and Las Vegas Boulevard, all of them hoping to stage events that will appeal to a broad audience.

Last year, the 19-member Southern Nevada Sporting Event Committee discussed how the LVCVA should coordinate major citywide events while Las Vegas Events, the LVCVA’S privately held events promotion affiliate already has a series of scheduled events contracted, including the rodeo.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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