uptown4784
Member
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2007
- Messages
- 299
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- 18
He still thinks nets going to move to brooklyn 2011
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Carton is an a-hole.
he dumbly suggested that with the financial crisis, Barclays might pull out. it's dumb on two grounds: 1) Barclays recommited two weeks ago and 2) Barclays recently established a retail brokerage business in the US, buying Lehman Bros. brokerage operation. The now need the marketing opportunity the arena presents more than they did when they did the original deal.
On the other hand, Yormark seemed stunned when asked about the Dolphins job...denied it categorically, but he seemed stunned.
Why wouldn't Barclay's recommit - everyone is lying through their teeth right now, why not Barclays. You are talking about a project that has been delayed for years - now they expect us to believe that in the worst economy since the Great Depression that they can come up with all this funding without issue? They are also assuming they beat the State filed lawsuits as soon as this Spring. I dont buy it
He was clearly lying when he was nailed on the Miami job - plus to hear him discuss the "wonderful Izod Center" made him lose the last shed of credibility he could have had.
How is this dumb? There is a reasonable possibility that Barclay's does not get built at all, much less by 2011.Carton is an a-hole.
he dumbly suggested that with the financial crisis, Barclays might pull out. it's dumb on two grounds: 1) Barclays recommited two weeks ago and 2) Barclays recently established a retail brokerage business in the US, buying Lehman Bros. brokerage operation. The now need the marketing opportunity the arena presents more than they did when they did the original deal.
On the other hand, Yormark seemed stunned when asked about the Dolphins job...denied it categorically, but he seemed stunned.
They should wait until Ratner has enough money to buy the land and stadium without using tax payer money.
Forbes said:The recent credit crisis might be the final nail in the coffin on the Nets plans to move to a new arena in Brooklyn. The Nets recently announced that the arena opening would be pushed back to 2011 at the earliest. That timetable appears overly optimistic for a project that has been hampered by delays, escalating costs and pushback from Brooklyn residents. The latest cost estimate is $950 for the arena, but financing has not been secured. British bank Barclays has not jumped ship yet on its 20-year naming rights agreement for the arena that could be worth as much as $400 million.