The arena concourse at the First Union Center.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
Philadelphia people initially started conversations with the MAAC during the MAAC men’s basketball tournament held in Trenton, N.J. this past year (Rider, which doesn’t have a varsity hockey program, is located in nearby Ewing, N.J). Trenton’s Sovereign Bank Arena is operated by Global Spectrum, the building management unit of Comcast-Spectacor. At first, they thought of hosting a regional in Trenton, but decided instead to focus their energy on the whole enchilada, back in the home office at the First Union Center — home for the Flyers and 76ers, which seats 19,500 for hockey.<\/p>\n
Despite Philadelphia being new to the college hockey process, the MAAC is not, having just hosted the 2003 Frozen Four in Buffalo.<\/p>\n
Of course, the Philadelphia people can also rattle off the big events the city has hosted since the First Union Center opened in 1996, starting with the World Cup of Hockey that summer. There’s the women’s basketball Final Four, the men’s basketball NCAA regional, the national figure skating championships, the X-Games, the NBA All-Star Game and the Republican National Convention.<\/p>\n
“We have a good package, but NCAA events are very similar,” Luukko says. “There’s always generally some awards, the major meetings, major press areas … So the name under the event may be different, but we’re pretty used to hosting these big events.”<\/p>\n
Philadelphia would be the largest media market (fourth) ever to host the Frozen Four, other than Anaheim\/Los Angeles, while having the added advantage of being much closer to a true hockey country.<\/p>\n
By contrast, St. Louis is 22nd in media market size and Denver is 18th. Of course, the drawback is, an event like the Frozen Four can get lost in a town so big, and focused on the NHL and NBA playoffs, especially in a place where college hockey is not really on the media’s radar screen.<\/p>\n
“We’re in a major Northeast media market, but at the same time, the event won’t get lost in the city,” Luukko says. “It will take the city over and be big news. So they’ll get that community feeling that the event is very important, but at the same time the advantage of being close to New York, Boston and Washington. So we’ve got that big league city with the small town feel.”<\/p>\n
The beauty of a place like St. Paul — and “old-school” places like Providence and Albany for that matter — was the ease of getting from event to event. The main hotels, the arena and things like the Hobey Baker Award ceremony were all within walking distance of each other.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The First Union Complex parking lot, site of the X-Games.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
Possibly hurting Philadelphia is that the arena area only has one hotel within walking distance, and downtown — known as Center City — is not that far, but is still three miles away.<\/p>\n
“We’re seven minutes from downtown, so we’re not in the suburbs,” says Luukko. “And the transportation will be perfect. The NCAA has never been concerned about that when they’ve come on a site visit. We have the subways. With a major event like this, not everyone is going to be able to walk to it anyway. The convention bureau does a great job of arranging for transportation.”<\/p>\n
For those concerned hotels cost more in a larger city, Luukko is ready with an answer.<\/p>\n
“We’ve got a great relationship with the hotels,” he says. “The rates are some of the better rates you’ll see.”<\/p>\n
The hockey lineage of Comcast-Spectacor goes back to Ed Snider owning the Flyers as a family-run operation. After bringing the 76ers on board, then selling the teams, The Spectrum and the rights to the new building to Comcast, the newly-born Comcast-Spectacor started up the AHL’s Philadelphia Phantoms to play in the old building. A few later, they opened a series of youth hockey facilities in the area, and began Global Spectrum<\/a>, which operates hockey facilities like New Hampshire’s Whittemore Center and World Arena in Colorado Springs.<\/p>\n“Because of our involvement in hockey over the years, from the highest levels even to guys like myself who have coached youth hockey, we have a good feel for what hockey people want, who we’re dealing with, and the type of service we have to provide for them,” Luukko says. “I think that’s the real advantage for us, not only owning the Flyers at the major level, but the Phantoms and all the rinks we own.<\/p>\n
“We’re pumped up, and we’re putting the full force behind this.”<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
The City of Brotherly Love enters the Frozen Four stage. Will the nation’s fourth-largest media market land a bid?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":140328,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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