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“Two years ago, you weren’t really thinking about this,” said Rob Tilliss, chief executive officer of Inner Circle Sports, a boutique investment bank that works within the sports and entertainment spheres. The company has worked with several professional sports teams, including the Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens. “Now (as a business executive with a Canadian team) you’re thinking about hedging strategies. You’re thinking about how much of my revenue is contractual season tickets versus day-of-game tickets. “As the Canadian dollar declines, you have to adjust your budget. They’re all probably reassessing their budgets for the next year or two.” This might be a particular issue for the Toronto Raptors, the lone Canadian NBA team. Rogers’ purchase of Bell’s shares in Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, the group that owns the Raptors, Maple Leafs, Toronto FC, among other teams and facilities, is expected to close in the middle of this year. That deal will give Rogers 75 percent control of MLSE. Rogers also owns the Toronto Blue Jays, although not under the MLSE umbrella. Rogers is a publicly traded company, and its stock price has fallen from more than $50 in December, to currently being under $40. Raptors president Masai Ujiri has never complained about MLSE’s financial support for the team, but these are unfamiliar, if not unprecedented, times.
ESPN canvassed 136 teams in the NFL, NBA, WNBA, MLB and NHL from November 2023 to July 2024 on whether they offer accommodations that fans with invisible disabilities say would make their game-day experience better. Of the 136 teams, 120 responded. In the NFL, the Broncos, Texans, Patriots, Cardinals and Bengals did not answer questions. In MLB, the Brewers, Pirates, Mariners and Cubs did not answer. In the NBA, the Timberwolves declined to answer and the Clippers responded before their move to the Intuit Dome. In the WNBA, the Lynx declined to answer. In the NHL, the Panthers, Sabres, Jets and Senators did not answer. (The Utah Hockey Club was omitted because of the team's impending move to Salt Lake City.) Some teams did not answer every question in the survey.
On Monday, the Ontario government announced that the province will be ramping up its reopening timeline. The NHL's Ottawa Senators, Toronto Maple Leafs, and the NBA's Toronto Raptors will be permitted to increase 50 percent capacity beginning on Feb. 17. In addition, if public health officials believe that it's a safe environment, then arenas could move to full capacity beginning on March 1.
This time it’s among the 122 professional sports franchises in North America, as rated by ESPN the Magazine in its annual assessment. It’s an unofficial competition the Spurs have long dominated, earning “Franchise of the Decade” honors last year after becoming the only team to finish in the top 10, including twice in first, in each of its first 10 years. This year, the rankings are: 1. Memphis Grizzlies (NBA) 2. San Antonio Spurs (NBA) 3. Indiana Pacers (NBA) 4. Oklahoma City Thunder (NBA) 5. Green Bay Packers (NFL) 6. Arizona Diamondbacks (MLB) 7. Pittsburgh Penguins (NHL) 8. Anaheim Ducks (NHL) 9. Ottawa Senators (NHL) 10. Baltimore Ravens (NFL)
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