Fountains, scubas, slot machines, Ferris wheel, NFL draft
LAS VEGAS >> Draft night on Thursday will include prospects walking a red carpet above the Bellagio fountains, a theater built specifically for the proceedings where they hope to hear their names called early, and the aura of gambling everywhere.
How about that for something different for the NFL?
There's no question the flavor of Sin City — from the attractions to the casinos to themed hotels to showgirls lining the players' walkway to the mountains nearby — infiltrates this draft. The league seems very pleased with that symbiosis.
“The key thing for the draft is to take on the character of where we are,” said Eric Finkelstein, NFL senior director of event operations. “This is not a cookie-cutter event. We try to embody and highlight where we are.”
He then noted the High Roller Ferris wheel directly in front of him and perhaps three football fields away from the theater stage where Commissioner Roger Goodell will announce the 32 picks on opening night. Finkelstein also mentioned circles on the stage emulating the famed “Welcome to Las Vegas” sign. Construction began on April 1.
Above the stage flashed digital playing cards, each one designed for a specific NFL team. Adjacent to the theater, which will seat about 1,500 and has a footprint of about 1 million square feet, is Caesars Forum. That convention center even has an “NFL Draft Door,” which the league requested during construction.
“We worked with Caesars to add a door to allow us to get the prospects out of the building with a direct connection to our theater build,” said Heather Nanberg, the league's director of events.
The 2020 draft originally was scheduled for Las Vegas, but became a virtual exercise because of the COVID-19 pandemic. So 2022 was substituted, and some plans changed.
At the Bellagio, for example, there was thought of placing the prospects on boats in the fountains to get them to the red
carpet. Time constraints and weather concerns — Thursday night's forecast calls for strong wind, unusual in Vegas this time of year — canned that idea.
Should the players need to escape the heat before or after walking the carpet,
though, Kelsey Pietrangelo, the NFL's manager of live event operations, joked that “we will have scuba suits if they'd like to jump in.”
Indeed, there were workers in scuba gear on Tuesday making late adjustments to the stage and
walkway.
“Using six divers is a first for us,” she added.
Pietrangelo noted that 300 drones will circle the fountains on Wednesday through Friday and the fountains will be in use during the pre-draft festivities.