Venue Detail
Oklahoma City Blazers
Revenues From Sports Venues Pro Facilities Report
January, 2010
Oklahoma City Blazers
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119 N Robinson Ste 630 Oklahoma City, OK 73102-4613 Phone: 405-235-7825 Fax: 405-272-9875 URL: www.okcblazers.com Owner: Bob Funk League: Central Hockey League Northern Conference, Northwest Division
Venue
Ford Center, 100 W Reno, Oklahoma City, OK 73102 Owner: Oklahoma City Managed by: SMG Facility Management Built: 2002 Capacity: 19,675 Concessionaire: Savor Suite caterer: Savor Soft drink: Pepsi Cola
Naming rights
Sold to: Local Ford dealers Price: $5, 000,000 Term: 10 years Expires: 2012
Ticket prices
Season tickets range from $275 to $475 Single tickets range from $9.00 to $17.00 2007 average attendance: 8,902 2008 average attendance: 8,713 2009 average attendance: 6,508
Luxury Suites
Quantity: 36 Term: 3 to 10 years Price: $150,000 to $300,000 Seats: 16 to 18 Includes: Tickets.
Club seats
Quantity: 3,300 Term: 1 to 5 years Price: $250 to $350 Includes: The price shown is for the annual seat license. Tickets are extra.
Financing
The $250 million Venue is 100 percent publicly funded from a new regional sales tax. Pct. public: 100
The Thunder was purchased in 2006 by a group of businesspeople from Oklahoma City leading to speculation that the team would be moved to the city that welcomed the New Orleans Hornets when the team was forced to relocate because of Hurricane Katrina. That concern became a reality in 2008 when the team moved to the Ford Center in Oklahoma City.
The Oklahoma City businessmen saw crowds fill the Ford Center while the Hornets played there temporarily when they were forced to leave New Orleans. The group, called the Professional Basketball Club, also arranged the Hornets’ stay in Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City Manager Jim Couch said the city expects to at least break even financially on the deal and could generate as much as $150,000 in additional revenue.
The Thunder will pay $1.6 million in annual rent at the Ford Center and $100,000 annual rent for a practice facility the city will build as part of a recent sales tax initiative. Voters approved a 1-cent sales tax extension that will pay for the $20 million practice facility and about $101 million in improvements to the Ford Center.
Those improvements began in 2009. The most significant addition is 48 loge boxes, four- and six-seat areas on both ends in the club sections.
The loge boxes seat six or eight fans and are available for year-round entertainment. For the same price as an eighth row Thunder courtside level season ticket, loge boxes – at prices of $12,375 per seat (in six-seat boxes) or $14,045 per seat (in four-seats boxes) – include tickets to most major concerts, family shows and all Thunder games.
The most lavish addition was 11 bunker suites, many purchased by the Thunder organization's founding partners. Bunker suites are private areas in the ground-level hallways.
Another feature is hydraulic systems being installed on the first few rows on both sides of the court and at both ends. Hydraulics will push seats below the floor, allowing Ford Center officials to easily reconfigure the arena from NBA games to Blazers hockey games and concerts.
The renovations are the second of three phases. Minor alterations were made before the Thunder's inaugural season.
The final phase, in the summer of 2010, will use the remaining $54 million to add 300,000 square feet to the building. The biggest items will be a new grand entrance on the southwest corner and even more space added to the Thunder's locker room.
The agreement also calls for the team to pay $409,000 a year for naming rights to the Ford Center, which is the same amount the city is set to receive from Ford, absent any agreement with an NBA team.
The team would keep any revenues from naming rights above that amount. A clause in the arena's naming rights deal allows for renegotiation if an NBA or National Hockey League team agrees to play at the Ford Center.
The city and the team would share revenues from concessions, clubs and restaurants.
The lease will run for 15 years with three additional 5-year options.
On concessions, team owners receive 40 percent of the first $2.5 million, 42.5 percent of the next $2.5 million and 45 percent of the balance. On suite food and beverage service, owners receive 25 percent of the first $1.25 million, 27.5 percent of the next $500,000 and 30 percent of the balance. Owners also would receive 10 percent of club and restaurant revenue and 15 percent of bar revenue.
Team owners have the right to terminate the agreement after six years if ticket revenues for two consecutive years drop below 85 percent of ticket revenues generated during the first two full seasons following completion of arena renovations. If that happens, owners would be required to pay the unamortized cost of arena improvements made for the NBA and could be required to pay the fair market value of the practice facility.
The Blazers moved into the new 18,500-seat arena in 2002. The Blazers pay $2,500 per game rent for weekday matches and $3,000 for those on Fridays and Saturdays.
Pepsi-Cola purchased pouring rights for a reported $1 million over 10 years. The deal was negotiated by SMG, which manages the facility and gets 15 percent of the rights deal. SMG also gets $125,000 per year to manage the building.
In addition to the soft drink concession, Pepsi gets scoreboard signage, video advertising and some club seats. Pepsi also leases one of the building's luxury suites.
The naming rights deal provides $5.05 million a year over 10 years with the option to pay $2.715 million more if the deal is extended to 15 years. Cars would also be supplied for facility operations and promotion for a $366,000 value over 15 years.
In addition to the name, the auto dealers get a luxury suite, 30 club seats, parking, signage, advertising and lobby space in which they could display cars. The bid was higher than originally expected. The dealers can upgrade their sponsorship to include various other promotions at a cost of $100,000 per year.
SMG's overall agreement gives the company 7 percent of the first year of naming rights revenue, which it will also help negotiate, then 5 percent of the earnings for each subsequent year. SMG gets 5 percent of the net premium seating sales, including suites. (Facilities, Financial, Ice Hockey, Professional Sports, Venue)