Why Does Portland Only Have The Blazers?

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Hey, you also have minor league baseball! Padre baseball, nonetheless- probably better this year than our major league team.
 
Hmmm............

Before I moved to Oregon, I had some pre-conceived ideas of the people in this area. I pictured a mix of hippies and urban snobs as well as tattooed bums and rich philosophers. Above all, I pictured an area that was so post-modern that they were essentially post-sports.

Obviously, I have found much of that which I assumed to find. All of these stereotypical Portlanders are definitely found in abundance.

However, one over-riding characteristic that they all possess is that they love their Trail Blazers!

Never before have I encountered the type of people that I encounter here that are sports fans. Sure, Michigan has many of the same types.

Michigan has their hippies and urban snobs, but in the Midwest they are simply called "lazy" and "wimpy" (as well as some not too b/r friendly names), and they do not follow sports.

Additionally the ski bums, outdoorsmen, and stoners that all exist everywhere else all exist here in Portland, but they too are Blazer fans.

Quite simply, the only unifying characteristic that these people share (aside from their inability to cope with extreme weather of any kind) is their love for their Blazers.

Perhaps this goes to a sense of counter-culture that the Blazers seem to embody. Perhaps it is because they are the only show in town as far as sports goes.
 
The author is (incorrectly, in my view) using city size rather than metro area size.

barfo
 
why does Portland only have the blazers? WELL THE BIG REASON? a couple actually.

1. NO LARGE STADIUM
2. Paul Allen

plus we do have PORTLAND TIMBERS FOOTBALL CLUB.
 
Makes the buildup to hoops season that much better. The Timbers will provide a nice outlet at this time in two years, but the anticipation for the NBA is like none other with sellouts to freakin' preseason games with chants of defense, and people standing on the their feet on timeouts. I kind of like it this way.
 
its pathetic. no leadership in oregon. sorry excuses over and over!!!!! keep it weird ...........sigh.
 
why does Portland only have the blazers? WELL THE BIG REASON? a couple actually.

1. NO LARGE STADIUM
2. Paul Allen

Paul is the reason we have one instead of zero teams. I don't see any reason to believe he's the reason we have one instead of two.

barfo
 
its pathetic. no leadership in oregon. sorry excuses over and over!!!!! keep it weird ...........sigh.

Ding ding ding! We have a winner!

The leadership void at the state and local levels for the last 20 years has been a bunch of pie-in-the sky nonsense that hasn't delivered anything practical. Vera Katz spent a decade daydreaming about burying I-405 and instead did nothing. Tom Potter spent his whole term commissioning a study of what Portlanders wanted, while giving us squat. One thing to be said about the otherwise moronic Sam Adams, at least he's already delivered on a plan to bring MLS to town.
 
I'm fine with just the Blazers.
 
I have always blamed it on small minded thinking from Government, and some residents.
 
Lack of sponsorships; quite simply there aren't enough corporate sponsors to support another major league franchise and without that revenue streams are unlikely to get a team to break-even status, regardless of fan interest or support. Of course we could have a big debate about why there aren't enough corporate sponsors (unfriendly business climate, historically an extractive based economy, etc.)
 
It's because there aren't enough corporate sponsors to go around.

this.

Paul is the reason we have one instead of zero teams. I don't see any reason to believe he's the reason we have one instead of two.

I think another owner (or ownership group) would have stepped in if Portland had 0 teams. IIRC, Portland is still one of the larger metropolitan areas (if not the largest) with only one major league sports team. With 0 it'd be a no-brainer for someone to establish a franchise here.
 
Well, I sure as hell don't want a boreball team cluttering up the works around here... Football would be alright, I guess, but soccer or whatever - fuhgetaboutit...
 
I'm always a little surprised to see how often the Blazers' fanbase get built up. I remember going to the Rose Garden during the 21 win season and seeing it about 40% full. Nobody wanted to talk about the team, except in disgust.

Now they're rising again, and many are hopping on the bandwagon. The arena sells out, you see billboards and jerseys everywhere. But when I talk to many Portlanders about the team, it seems the knowledge is pretty cursory--pretty much limited versions of whatever Jason Quick says. And if the team took another nosedive in wins and losses, I have no doubt attendance and enthusiasm would go right back to where it was.

I guess that's pro sports for you. Seems like there's a lot more loyalty in college football/basketball.
 
Paul is the reason we have one instead of zero teams. I don't see any reason to believe he's the reason we have one instead of two.

barfo

Unless Uther was referring to PA going to the NFL head offices and requesting that Portland be part of the Seattle Seahawks market. It's absurd. Should Boston and Philly be part of New York's market? Should Baltimore and DC be part of Philadelphia's?

But to answer the root question, I'll list a few reasons:

1. An unwillingness for the citizenry to publicly finance a facility. If we would have passed the Delta Dome bond measure, we'd be talking about the Portland Seahawks.

2. A lack of corporate sponsors. Nike is a bad corporate citizen in terms of sports because they can't favor one team over another. Phil Knight can, but Nike can't. If Nike were in the potato peeling business, we may have another team.

3. Our leadership wins votes by being anti-business. You don't get re-elected in Portland by choosing to subsidize sports over schools, parks or bike paths.

4. We're in the hinterlands. We're the West Coast equivalent of flyover country. The perception way over in New York is that one team is sufficient for the entire Pacific Northwest. Hence, the Seahawks, Ms, Canucks and Blazers.

5. We're a relatively newer city in terms of being big. Charlotte has gotten over it by having large corporate sponsors. Buffalo, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, etc. all have a history.

6. The perception is still that we're a minor league town, kind of like Hartford, Raleigh or Jacksonville. We're fine for sports like lax or soccer, but not worthy of more than one of the Big Four.
 
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I think it's probably safe to say that if we do get another pro team(big four), it'll be NHL. We've got a home for it already. Seems like we've come close several times.
 
plus we do have PORTLAND TIMBERS FOOTBALL CLUB.

This. I kinda like having College Football (for Duck and Beaver fans) Then Blazers to get through the winter and spring, then when Basketball is getting done there are Timbers for the summer, then we are right back at Football season again. We are fine without MLB (although I wouldnt complain if we had it) and NFL wont be here for a loooooooooooong time.
 
Well, I sure as hell don't want a boreball team cluttering up the works around here... Football would be alright, I guess, but soccer or whatever - fuhgetaboutit...

What professional sport is left for you to like?? :confused:
 
Well, I sure as hell don't want a boreball team cluttering up the works around here... Football would be alright, I guess, but soccer or whatever - fuhgetaboutit...

arlready getting soccer, and I couldnt be happier! :ghoti:
 
LOL. I hope most people in the city don't think this way. If they do that would explain why you don't have another REAL major sports franchise. MLS:lol:

hey, until the US has English Premier League like soccer, or La Liga, MLS is as good as soccer is gonna get.
 
By the way the "I couldnt be happier comment" was in response to his saying "***hedaboutit" about Soccer. Of course I would be happy with NFL or MLB as well.
 
MLB would be awesome in Portland. They could easily construct a stadium where the river, downtown skyline and Mt Hood would all be visible. It would sell the city to the rest of the country. Baseball itself isn't exciting, but the atmosphere at a game is tremendous. There is nothing quite like sitting out in the sun, drinking beers and eating hotdogs......The good stadium ones.

It is a relaxing, inexpensive way to spend an evening or weekend day. It also happens to be going on at a time where there is nothing happening in Portland.

If Portland got the same design firm that Pittsburgh used for PNC Park, they could hit it huge....no pun intended.
 

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