Posted by cwillis802 on 5/30/2015 9:54:00 PM (view original):
Some big cities in Texas that don't have teams. San Antonio. El Paso. You need a pretty hefty population to support a team I think. I wonder if Montreal would be ready for a team again.
This I guess is the problem for the Great Plains. An area bigger than Europe is covered by the Kansas City Royals and maybe the Twins if you want to count them. But what Great Plains city can support a team? Omaha? Topeka? Wichita? You can have a team cover a state, but the distances to get to the stadium are pretty vast.
By the way the largest city in the US without a major sports team of any kind is lovely Austin, Texas, a city I like very much, though it is a fraction of the size of San Antonio. On the other hand, they are almost close enough to be sister cities, so maybe an Austin-San Antonio team could make it.
ON THE OTHER HAND: I have the impression that TV revenues are increasingly as important as gate receipts (and indeed had baseball figured this out back in the 1950s the Dodgers could have stayed in Brooklyn), and so perhaps population, distance, etc. may not matter that much.
Plus there is revenue sharing, though at a certain point New Yorkers will complain about subsidizing the whole rest of the country's baseball fix.
'course we already do that for everything else in the country:
http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/08/americas-fiscal-union
http://www.businessinsider.com/red-states-are-welfare-queens-2011-8?IR=T#!IpqnG
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/05/which-states-are-givers-and-which-are-takers/361668/
5/31/2015 7:02 AM (edited)