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Peter Watts, an attorney representing project opponents led by downtown hotelier Gordon Sondland, now retorts that Portland's bid is hopelessly short of hotel rooms—Hyatt or no Hyatt.
"Despite what Tom Hughes and Metro say, Portland has no realistic chance of getting the NBA All-Star Game, regardless of whether the hotel is built," Watts tells WW.
Watts points to a 2013 report in Forbes magazine that quotes a league executive saying an all-star game host city needs 6,000 rooms in four- or five-star hotels.
Watts says even if Metro built the Hyatt, Portland would be at least 3,205 rooms short of that mark.
"Portland has less than half the total rooms required by the NBA, even after the hotel," Watts says. "In my view, it’s intellectually dishonest for Metro to claim that we are one convention center hotel away from landing the all-star game. It’s simply false."
http://www.wweek.com/portland/blog-...ting_the_all_star_game_hyatt_or_no_hyatt.html
"Despite what Tom Hughes and Metro say, Portland has no realistic chance of getting the NBA All-Star Game, regardless of whether the hotel is built," Watts tells WW.
Watts points to a 2013 report in Forbes magazine that quotes a league executive saying an all-star game host city needs 6,000 rooms in four- or five-star hotels.
Watts says even if Metro built the Hyatt, Portland would be at least 3,205 rooms short of that mark.
"Portland has less than half the total rooms required by the NBA, even after the hotel," Watts says. "In my view, it’s intellectually dishonest for Metro to claim that we are one convention center hotel away from landing the all-star game. It’s simply false."
http://www.wweek.com/portland/blog-...ting_the_all_star_game_hyatt_or_no_hyatt.html

