Quote:
Originally Posted by ThePriceWentUp
It’s no surprise the development of The Point aligns with a potential Winter Olympics. Much easier to sell an enormous stadium to taxpayers when it would be host to the largest sporting event in the world. What TRAX, U of U development, etc was for 2002, the Point will be for the 2030/34 Winter Olympics. Having worked closely with the proposal, in the state’s mind this is their chance to establish ‘family and community values’ as an essential component of our states’s tendency towards innovation. That’s not Daybreak but it’s not Salt Lake either. Expect something in between but with much much higher quality builds than what we are accustomed to in SLC.
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I don't see a 51,000+ stadium going up at the Point and that's how much RES sits, which would be perfect for the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics.
So, there would be no need to build a new stadium there when a larger one already exists to host the opening/closing ceremonies.
And the more recent MLB stadiums seat far fewer than RES does currently (and would expanded out to host the games, as remember, for the Olympics, it surpassed 50,000 in capacity with temporary seating back in 2002).
The last MLB stadium built that sat over 50,000 was Coors Field in Denver.
Since 2000, here's the capacity of every new MLB stadium:
Comerica Park (41,083)
PNC Park (38,747)
American Family Field (41,900)
Great American Ball Park (42,319)
Petco Park (40,209)
Citizens Bank Park (42,792)
Busch Stadium (45,494)
Nationals Park (41,339)
Yankee Stadium (46,537)
Citi Field (41,922)
Target Field (38,544)
LoanDepot Park (36,742)
Truist Park (41,084)
Globe Life Field (40,300)
Almost every stadium built this century seats 10,000+ fewer fans than RES. I just don't see the Olympics going smaller and they certainly aren't going to buck the trend and build a 50,000 seat stadium out there that they plan to later convert to a MLB park.