Dolphins CEO Says Future In Miami Is 'bleak'

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  • TheImmortalGoud
    No longer a noob
    • Jan 2011
    • 1790

    Dolphins CEO Says Future In Miami Is 'bleak'

    Miami Dolphins CEO Mike Dee said in a television interview Sunday his team won't pay for any renovations to Sun Life Stadium after the Florida Legislature ended its session without passing any funding plan to refurbish the stadium.


    Miami Dolphins CEO Mike Dee said in a television interview Sunday his team won't pay for any renovations to Sun Life Stadium after the Florida Legislature ended its session without passing any funding plan that would assist the team's quest to refurbish the stadium.

    "We cannot do this without a private-public partnership," Dee told WFOR-TV in Miami. "At this time we have no intention of investing more."

    When asked about the long-term future of the Dolphins in South Florida, Dee said: "I wouldn't want to prognosticate what the future holds, but it's clearly bleak."


    Dee said in the interview that 73-year-old owner Stephen Ross has no intentions to move the franchise, but at some point he'll sell the team and the aging stadium will be an issue confronting the new owner.

    Dee was asked in the interview whether moving the franchise to Los Angeles now becomes an option.

    "I don't think it's an option for Steve Ross, but for a subsequent owner? The Dolphins are one of the only franchises in the National Football League that do not have a long-term lease with their community," he said.

    The refusal of the GOP-controlled Legislature to aid the team wasn't just a defeat for the Dolphins -- it could also sack South Florida's efforts to lure another Super Bowl to the region in the next few years. Miami was expected to vie, along with Santa Clara (home of the San Francisco 49ers' new stadium, opening in 2014) and Houston for Super Bowl L in 2016 and Super Bowl LI in 2017.

    "We clearly have our work cut out for us," Dee said. "Having a stadium that's competitive is probably comparable to having a good quarterback when you're playing football. You can win without one, but it's hard to win regularly, and it's hard to beat a team that's got a good quarterback. And in this case we're playing a community [Santa Clara] that has a great quarterback, a brand-new stadium. Houston has a new stadium that's been renovated, so we're going to have to work hard."

    Houston Texans owner Bob McNair said his city won't become complacent about its chances of hosting the 2017 game.

    "Certainly what happened doesn't help Miami's bid. There's no doubt about that," McNair said. "But that doesn't say that the owners couldn't decide to still go to Miami."

    Miami has hosted the Super Bowl 10 times.

    "The House leadership has made our efforts to bring the Super Bowl back to Miami and South Florida much more difficult," said Rodney Barreto, chairman of the South Florida Super Bowl Host Committee.

    Dee said the Dolphins aren't interested in a "Band-Aid" approach to renovations but instead wanted to pursue a plan to modernize the stadium that would be "tantamount to a new stadium."

    The Dolphins wanted both state and local help to pay for $400 million worth of renovations to 26-year-old Sun Life Stadium. The Dolphins wanted $3 million a year for the next 30 years from the state. Dee said Ross was committed to funding 70 percent of the cost.

    The Dolphins weren't the only sports franchise affected. Others who lost out include the city of Orlando, which was hoping for help to lure a Major League Soccer team, as well as the Jacksonville Jaguars and Daytona International Speedway.

    The professional sports teams were all backing a Florida Senate proposal that would have allowed each of them to compete for a share of state tax dollars. The measure would have created a process for pro teams to vie for $13 million a year in state incentives.

    But the House -- led by Speaker Will Weatherford -- refused to bring up the legislation.

    "I think part of the complication was the fact that it wasn't just the Dolphins," Weatherford said Friday. "You had five or six different franchises that were looking for a tax rebate, and that's serious public policy. You're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars, and I think the House just never got comfortable there when the session ended."

    But the defeat was especially stinging for the Dolphins because the team had already agreed to pay for a Miami-Dade County referendum on whether to raise local bed taxes to assist the team. The initial Senate bill authorized the use of the taxes. The failure of legislators to act makes the May 14 ballot question meaningless, even though early and absentee balloting had already begun.

    "We suspect that it's a pure political decision, that [Weatherford is] choosing politics over the right for the voters of Miami-Dade County to decide this issue, and that's a shame," Dee said.

    The Dolphins could try again next year for legislative approval, but they may have burned that bridge with their criticism of Weatherford.

    "He'll still be the speaker of the House next year," Dee said, "and I don't see him changing his opinion."
  • EmpireWF
    Giants in the Super Bowl
    • Mar 2009
    • 24082

    #2
    Billionaire owner wants tax payers to fund changes to stadium?



    Comment

    • dave
      Go the fuck outside
      • Oct 2008
      • 15492

      #3
      Right or wrong, the team will win this battle.
      My Twitch video link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000

      Twitch archived games link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000/profile/past_broadcasts

      Comment

      • NAHSTE
        Probably owns the site
        • Feb 2009
        • 22233

        #4
        *waits for report that Los Angeles has "expressed interest" as a strong arm tactic*

        Comment

        • krulmichael
          STRAAAAANGE MUSIC!
          • Feb 2009
          • 10721

          #5
          Originally posted by EmpireWF
          Billionaire owner wants tax payers to fund changes to stadium?

          'Murica!

          Twitch Channel
          http://www.twitch.tv/krulmichael20


          Season I: 10-6 (NFC North Champions)
          Season II: 9-7 (NFC North Champions)
          Season III: 13-3 (NFC Champions)
          Season IV: 11-5 (NFC North Champions)
          Season V: 2-1

          Comment

          • sraczk2011
            West Coast Bias
            • Aug 2009
            • 371

            #6
            So we're within a month of the "Stephen Ross visits LA, meets with civic leaders" story? It's insane how many cities have rolled over after these types of threats.

            Comment

            • Bigpapa42
              Junior Member
              • Feb 2009
              • 3185

              #7
              Its really fucking sad that the NFL and these NFL teams make so little money that they basically have to beg. These politicians - and you taxpayers especially - ought to be really ashamed of yourself. At this rate, teams can barely afford to pay the players enough to meet basic human needs and the league seems like its in danger of folding for financial reasons. Professional football is almost done, financially, because these teams can't count of fans to pay any money. Fucking terrible.

              Comment

              • RyanLeaf16
                #DoSomething
                • Feb 2009
                • 3211

                #8
                From everything I read, Ross won't move the team. However, he may consider selling and the new owner may want to move the team. Plus, there is rumor that a local state rep here in Tampa (Weatherford) has held this up so that Tampa may be granted Super Bowl 50 and then the bill move forward after that. When it comes down to it, it is not really "taxpayer" money directly. It is in the form of a new hotel tax, so it would likely hit tourists more.
                Maddon & Friedman: Pissing off the AL East since 2008

                Comment

                • RobbyB34
                  UGA
                  • Jul 2012
                  • 982

                  #9
                  I'd buy the Dolphins if he is selling them.

                  Comment

                  • Sven Draconian
                    Not a Scandanavian
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 1319

                    #10
                    Originally posted by RyanLeaf16
                    From everything I read, Ross won't move the team. However, he may consider selling and the new owner may want to move the team. Plus, there is rumor that a local state rep here in Tampa (Weatherford) has held this up so that Tampa may be granted Super Bowl 50 and then the bill move forward after that. When it comes down to it, it is not really "taxpayer" money directly. It is in the form of a new hotel tax, so it would likely hit tourists more.
                    That would still be a tax. Money spent on a hotel tax is money not being spent at a local bar/restaurant ect.

                    Comment

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