Oklahoma Magazine March 2019

Page 18

The State ECONOMICS

Dribbling to the Bank

Hosting March Madness games, as Tulsa does this month, can bring $10 million into a city in just a few days.

F

KANSAS PLAYS MICHIGAN STATE DURING 2017 MARCH MADNESS AT BOK CENTER. PHOTO COURTESY TULSA SPORTS COMMISSION

16

or college basketball aficionados, March Madness provides ecstasy and heartbreak. For employers, it often leads to lost productivity. And for cities hosting games this month, such as Tulsa, hoops hoopla produces a sweet sound – not the thump thump of dribbles on hardwood, but the cha-ching cha-ching of cash registers … to the tune of millions of dollars. Tulsa’s BOK Center has pulled a rare feat of landing first- and secondround games in both 2017 and this year on March 22-24. The half-dozen games in 2017 supplied a $10.3 million boost to Tulsa County, says Vince Trinidad, executive director of the Tulsa Sports Commission. Similarly, Wichita, Kansas, saw a $10 million economic boost while hosting first- and second-round games last year. Trinidad, low-balling his estimate, says another $10 million should come Tulsa County’s way this month. “The NCAA wouldn’t be coming back to Tulsa so quickly without such strong community support,” he says. “Having strong partnerships is critical, especially for us with the University of Tulsa as the host institution and

OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | MARCH 2019

SMG [the arena’s venue manager]. Plus, the BOK Center is not a normal arena; it’s an award-winning arena.” Oklahoma City hosted first- and second-round games of the NCAA men’s tournament in 2016 at Chesapeake Energy Arena; those six contests generated a conservative estimate of about $3.3 million to the central OKC economy, says Sue Hollenbeck, director of sports business with the Oklahoma City Convention and Visitor Bureau. “Any time an event is at a specific venue, money is spent mostly around that space,” she says. Most sites are on a three-year or longer rotation. For instance, Tulsa had games in 2011, but no others until 2017. The earliest that OKC and Tulsa will get another chance to host is in 2022. Trinidad notes that competition between cities across the country is fierce when it comes to participating in March Madness. Hollenbeck anticipates that OKC will eventually get back into the March Madness mix because districts around the arena have continued to improve. “In 2016, we noticed that people really liked the walkability of downtown,” says Hollenbeck, adding that

nearby Bricktown, Automobile Alley and Midtown also benefited from those contests. “Now we have more hotels and the streetcar for easier transport between districts.” Ease of getting around is also key to Tulsa’s success in hosting March Madness. Trinidad says first-time visitors are surprised at how many notable destinations are 15-20 minutes from their hotels. “They can quickly go to the Arts District or Gilcrease Museum or Philbrook Museum or the Golden Driller at Expo Square or Cherry Street or the Oklahoma Aquarium in Jenks,” he says. “In really congested cities, you can’t do that.” Trinidad expects visitors will have an even better experience this month than in 2017 because of the opening of the Gathering Place just south of downtown and the addition of bicycle and scooter rentals. “Of course, it also depends upon the teams we get,” he says of Selection Sunday on March 17. “In 2017, we were lucky to get Kansas, the No. 1 team then. But we also got some on-thebubble teams. You want teams whose fans will travel anywhere. And we’re always hopeful to get the best teams.” BRIAN WILSON


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Michele Campbell

2min
page 82

Red Dirt Quirkiness

1min
page 80

Photos That Move You

1min
page 79

Casino Chaos

1min
page 79

Building a Great Time

1min
page 78

Reward Your Ears

1min
page 78

Hitting the Peak

1min
page 78

The Man Behind the Music

1min
page 77

'Phil'-ed to the Brim

1min
page 77

Go Green

1min
page 76

Flower Power

1min
page 75

A Graceful Balancing Act

3min
pages 72-73

Drinkin' and Eatin' the Blarney

2min
page 71

A Global Creator

3min
pages 70-71

Not Foolin' Anyone With These Biscuits

1min
page 68

Mom and Pop Meet Pizzazz

3min
pages 67-68

Summer Camp Directory

3min
page 62

Spring It On

4min
pages 56-61

From Sooner State to Silver Screen

6min
pages 52-55

Modern Appeal

12min
pages 40-42, 44, 46, 48, 50

Frozen in Time

2min
page 36

Not Catching Enough Zs

2min
page 34

Splendor in the Light

3min
pages 32-33

An inviting Renovation

3min
pages 28-30

One Man's Trash ...

1min
page 27

Western Swing Savant

5min
pages 24-25

A Haven for Second Chances

2min
page 23

On the Road to Tipperary

3min
page 22

Brewing a New Medium

2min
page 21

Framing the Future

2min
page 20

A Heart for Others

2min
page 19

Dribbling to the Bank

2min
page 18

Learning the Ropes

2min
page 17

Rage Against the Machine

2min
page 16

Honeycomb Hither

5min
pages 13-14
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.