Nuggets 123, Warriors 118, OT...
Clippers 104, Bulls 97...
Presented By: 2010-01-21...
Nuggets-Warriors, Box...
Clippers-Nuggets Preview 2010-...
ROSTER REPORT 2010-01-20...
Nuggets-Warriors Preview 2010-...
Any challengers for the Lakers...
ROSTER REPORT 2010-01-19...
Enigmatic Nuggets finally at f...
Taurean Green to sign in Spain...
Nuggets re-sign J.R. Smith...
Web viewing of NBA games may s...
Melo not happy Nuggets gave Ca...
Heat sign Yakhouba Diawara...
Steve
Steve
Steve
Steve
Steve
Steve
Steve
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
 
 
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to Windows Live
News » Best seat in town: in front of TV


Best seat in town: in front of TV


Best seat in town: in front of TV
As I type, Altitude television announcers Mike Haynes and Peter McNab have just finished briefing Pepsi Center fans on the scoreboard screens, providing preview information about the Avalanche-Minnesota Wild matchup.

At the end of the segment, Haynes reminded fans that if they can't make it to the arena, they could always catch the games on Altitude.

We take this for granted: The Avalanche and Nuggets are on television virtually every game, home and away.

Absolutely, that's progress.

When I was a young(er) beat writer, covering the separately owned Colorado Rockies of the NHL and then the Nuggets, club executives and ownerships were united in at least one stand.

They weren't going to sabotage their box office by televising home games in Denver and the Rocky Mountain region.

Nuggets president and general manager Carl Scheer's ahead-of-his- time vision on the Basketball and business fronts were instrumental in turning the franchise from a mild ABA draw into an NBA hot ticket, and his impact in Denver and the sports world is felt to this day. But even he was averse to televising home games on anything other than an occasional basis.

Cable television's pervasive reach has changed the picture since. It's wrong to say the Avalanche and Nuggets, both owned by Stan Kroenke, are on "free" TV. They're not, as we're reminded whenever the cable bill arrives. Kroenke also owns Altitude, which provides a "just a bit outside" perspective that comes with in-house broadcasts. So if Altitude is ever a license to print money, it will be going directly to Kroenke.

In the long run, televising home games creates interest, educates a fan base, and if done right, can at least be a financial complement to gate receipts. Everyone wins.

But ?

When some of my brethren, and even many fans, seem prone to make attendance at home games some sort of moral litmus test, they rarely take into consideration how much the big picture has changed in the past 30 years.

And the recent economic slide adds to the temptation to stay home. Ticket prices are astronomical. You can get a good 37-inch HDTV for the price of about a night for two at an NHL or NBA game - and stay home and watch the games, all the games, as part of a cable bill you would probably pay, anyway.

I'm not saying the old-school hardliners were right.

I'm saying that under the circumstances, I'm amazed the live gates have held up as well as they have.


Author: Fox Sports
Author's Website: http://www.foxsports.com
Added: January 6, 2009

 

 
Copyright © Nuggetsclub.com, Inc. All rights reserved 2012.