Not more than two years ago Ted Leonsis, owner of Monumental Sports, shared in a December, 2022 post on his then-popular Ted’s Take blog that DC fans where deserving of Abe Pollin’s $200M sports arena named the Verizon Center (now Capital One Arena).
Leonsis wrote how his team planned to make improvements, focus
on technology and make investments in the Big Three: signs, suites, and sound, along
with “major redevelopments soon that will change much of the external part of
the building.”
Juxtapose that, fast forward even, to the present.
Almost a year to the day, fans were ‘treated’ to another December
statement by Leonsis where he announced that he’d be taking his team’s talents
to a proposed 70-acre site in Alexandria’s Potomac Yard area that, when
complete, will boast the headquarters for Monumental Sports, an
industry-leading arena, shops, jobs and more.
Opinions have been mixed with some in favor of the proposal,
and some not. Today we focus on the ‘some
nots’.
Alexandria City High School/ Photo CD Brown
And so it would be that on a cold and blustery Sunday
afternoon in January, that stakeholders of Alexandria came out to Alexandria
City High School (formerly T.C. Willams, and still Home of the Titans) in
an open forum to voice concerns over the proposed move of Monumental Sports’ professional
sports teams making their way across the Potomac into their back yard.
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The Coalition.
One such stakeholder, The
Coalition to Stop The Arena at Potomac Yard (a 504 (c)(4) organization) made
up of area concerned citizens, claims the new Potomac Yard arena is a “monumental
mistake” that would promise little, cause divide, and is a slick sales job, per
the organization’s website.
“We think it’s a
boondoggle project”, said Eric Weiner, a spokesperson for the organization and
self-professed decades-long Washingtonian.
“As you’ve heard today, unfortunately, our lawmakers are
lacking information; they’ve admitted as much. This announcement was made in
Virginia after closed-door session; our governor and mayor came out the next
day and made a splashy announcement that nobody knew about. They’re fast-tracking
this project, and the question we have is, why the rush?’, he asked.
Members of StopTheArena.org/ Photo CD Brown
“They’re asking us to backstop over a $1B in taxes, but they
don’t want our input? That just doesn’t sound right, said Weiner.
The arena is slated to be built in 2028 with the Virginia
governor calling it a “one-of-a-kind sports and entertainment district that
will generate $12B and 30,000 new jobs."
But it’s the data, not the perception, that matters to some.
“I think the decision should be made strictly upon data”,
said another attendee of the open forum.
“That’s the problem. They’re saying they can generate this
much revenue and here’s a brochure that shows the findings that's going to
promise you this, he said.
“Emotions taken out of it, stadiums, arenas, sports centers [sic]
really don’t ever deliver the economic boom that people think are gonna come.
Maybe you’ll get some, maybe you won’t, but what you’re most assuredly are
gonna get, are the problems."
An attendee, “known for asking for data all the time”, Abdel Elnoubi, Alexandria PTA
president, school board member and City Council candidate was making rounds, speaking with attendees. While he says he hasn’t made up his mind either way on the arena he says he wants
to get perspectives from residents and those in the area before he’s able to
make an educated decision.
Elnooubi says that there is a 50-50 mixed opinion on the proposal based on those he's spoken to.
Abdel Elnoubi: Alexandria school board member, PTA president and City Council candidate, talks to a constituent. Photo CD Brown
“I want to also look at data”, he said. “I want to look at hidden costs, if there are
any. Like how are we gonna deal with issues like traffic and everything else
and what that’s gonna cost, and any solvable problems before we make that
decision. It’s good if it’s gonna bring money, but what’s the cost of that", Elnoubi asked, citing that the school's budget is already in a pinch.
Getting There.
Ricki Deena, another supporter of The Coalition to Stop The Arena at Potomac
Yard and Potomac Yard resident, said she is against the arena for the speculative
problems and concerns expressed on the day such as more traffic being added to
the existing gridlock along Alexandria’s Route 1 corridor; the
probability of crime; the issue of the arena being subsidized by taxpayers, and
metro accessibility to games.
“I don’t know. Are we going to have hover crafts?”,
Deena asked. “A water taxi is not realistic. I know that idea’s been thrown around”,
she said.
“The whole process of it, there’s been no transparency and our
elected officials need to remember they work for us, not the other way around”,
she said.
Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, has given his support for additional funding for Potomac Yard metro improvements after Metro's general manager, Randy Clarke, noted that the Potomac Yard metro couldn't handle the additional Wizards, Capitals traffic.
“I don’t think we would have carried the bill without the
governor’s commitment to solve the Metro funding problem,” said Senate Majority
Leader Scott A. Surovell (D-Fairfax).
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Accessibility,
affordability (and salaries).
Funding
the metro problem aside, some don’t see the arena in Alexandria as a plus
for the city.
“Having
the stadium down the road will not make me go the game”, another
attendee said. “I think these sports people are overpaid. I think they spend
too much money on salaries”, she said.
”Ted
Leonsis is a billionaire. He should be able to fund this without the impact to
the state and the residents. Having it down the street is not gonna make me go
anymore than it would to D.C.”, she added. “I might go to one maybe a year, might
go to none…. I’m not buying season tickets.”
She
also hinted on the issue of the cost to families to attend games.
“It’s
too much for families”, she said. “People can’t afford it. All the rents that
they have to pay are gonna be so exorbitant that the food they’re gonna charge
for it is gonna be exorbitant. It’s not
some place that I’m gonna be going to a restaurant. I’m gonna be going out of town, into Falls
Church or little bit further out where they’re not paying these rents and I can
get a better deal.
What do you think? Should the teams stay, or go? Inquiring minds want to know.
See also: Potomac Yard Metro Shutdown? | StopTheArena.org | What About The Washington Mystics?
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Comments
Chicago Bulls?
Miami Heat?
Cleveland Browns?
Baltimore Ravens?
Philadelphia Flyers?
DC Divas?
Loudon Lobsters?
This is a most weird development.