Cleveland Browns moving to suburbs

Polishprince

Diamond Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2016
Messages
49,424
Reaction score
40,268
Points
3,615
Smart move, no doubt about it. Most Cleveland football fans want to avoid the bullets flying around in the center of the city, and this will give them the opportunity to attend and not worry so much about getting caught up in a driveby.

Liberal pro-crime policies will cause other teams to follow the flight to the suburbs

 
Smart move, no doubt about it. Most Cleveland football fans want to avoid the bullets flying around in the center of the city, and this will give them the opportunity to attend and not worry so much about getting caught up in a driveby.

Liberal pro-crime policies will cause other teams to follow the flight to the suburbs

I predict that the farther they move from the city that is a disaster area, namely Cleveland, the more success they will have, just like Baltimore who had to leave to win a Super Bowl.
 
There is no better grift than this, the douche owner who paid Watson all the money will reward fans with higher taxes as they pay for his new stadium.

The poor fans, although I could not blame them for booing at Watson getting injured, such is their frustration. At least they are done with him now.
 
There is no better grift than this, the douche owner who paid Watson all the money will reward fans with higher taxes as they pay for his new stadium.

The poor fans, although I could not blame them for booing at Watson getting injured, such is their frustration. At least they are done with him now.
Don't most all the owners do this? Or have this mentality?
 
Inside Progressive cities when something is built there is usually an inner-city shakedown on projects to get the go ahead. There is a savings right there for building the project outside city limits. A couple of hundred million dollars out of the total cost is expensive. And it is still not enough from those empowered to grift as they believe they are owed. A huge transfer of wealth has occurred in the last several decades. Thing should be better because of it. Its mind boggling.
 
I read where Cleveland may try to enforce Ohio's Art Modell Law over the 10 mile move to Brook Park. My guess is they'll probably use it only in negotiating investment from the Browns owners to redevelop the existing lakefront stadium site.

The law, Ohio Revised Code Section 9.67, says that no professional team owner can leave a taxpayer-supported stadium without first signing an agreement with the host city. Or team owners must provide at least six months’ notice of their intent to leave. Within those six months, they must give the city or local investors a chance to buy the team.

 
Back
Top Bottom