Message Area
Casually read the BBS message area using an easy to use interface. Messages are categorized exactly like they are on the BBS. You may post new messages or reply to existing messages!

You are not logged in. Login here for full access privileges.

Previous Message | Next Message | Back to The National Hockey League Discu...  <--  <--- Return to Home Page
   Networked Database  The National Hockey League Discu...   [248 / 900] RSS
 From   To   Subject   Date/Time 
Message   The Hockey Writers    All   Islanders at Home - A House Divided   July 19, 2018
 11:51 AM *  

Being a New York Islanders fan is not easy. Since the early 1980s when the team
 won four consecutive Stanley Cups, playoff appearances have been few and far
between, making it difficult for fans to find anything to cheer about for an
extended period of time. The news that they will finally be building a
state-of-the-art, permanent home adjacent to Belmont Racetrack provided reason
 to cheer, but the recent loss of John Tavares to the Toronto Maple Leafs via
free agency means that their longtime star and current captain won't be with
them when they get there.

To make things even more fun for the fans as they wait for the new building in
Belmont, over the next three years, the Islanders plan to divide their home
games between two arenas: the Barclays Center, which has been their Brooklyn
home since the 2015-2016 season, and the refurbished Nassau Coliseum, now
dubbed the NYCB Live's Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, which was their
Uniondale, Long Island home prior to the move to Brooklyn.

It was originally announced that for this season, the Islanders would play 12
games at the NYCB Live arena and complete the rest of their schedule at the
Barclays Center. Later, that plan was amended by adding eight more games,
increasing the number of games played in their former Long Island home to 20,
and reducing the number of Brooklyn games to an almost equal 21. So this will
truly be a divided season for the team and its fans.Islanders fans donning
alternate jerseys from two different eras (Stan Szeto-USA TODAY
Sports)Islanders Arena Timeline

To understand the circumstances that created this unusual situation, it is
helpful to look at a timeline of the team';s arena journey.

1972 - The Nassau Coliseum opens its doors in Uniondale to become the home
arena for the NBA's New York Nets and one of the NHL's newest expansion teams,
the New York Islanders.

1980-83 - The New York Islanders win four consecutive Stanley Cup championships
 representing the high water mark of hockey activity in the Coliseum's history.

The 1990s - The Coliseum is showing its age. During this decade, it is
alternately referred to affectionately as "the old barn" when the team is
playing well, or "the crumbling old building" during the more frequent
non-playoff years.

The 2000s - By the early part of the decade, the Coliseum has become
embarrassingly outdated compared to other NHL arenas. But locked into a
long-term lease, Islanders ownership has very little leverage to negotiate a
needed makeover.

2004 - Islanders majority owner Charles Wang proposes the Lighthouse Project. 
 This is an ambitious $37-billion real estate development proposal that would
use private funding to build office space, upscale housing, a luxury hotel, an
entertainment complex, and a new arena for the Islanders on the property
currently occupied and surrounding the Nassau Coliseum. The project was
rejected by local authorities in the Town of Hempstead as too dense for the
area.

2010 - Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano introduces a $400-million referendum
to renovate the Coliseum using taxpayer dollars. It is rejected by voters in
2011.

2012 - After years of futile attempts to work out an improvement plan for the
aging Coliseum, Charles Wang announces that the Islanders will be moving their
home base to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

2014-15 - The Islanders play their last season at the Nassau Coliseum.

2015-16 - The Islanders play their first season at the Barclays Center. Almost
immediately, fans begin to complain about bad ice, obstructed views, and
difficulty with train travel to the arena. Shortly afterward, team
representatives begin echoing some of these complaints.

2017 - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announces that the Islanders have been
awarded the right to build a new arena at the Belmont Park site.

2018 - The Islanders announced that the team will be dividing its home schedule
 between Brooklyn and Uniondale for the next three years while the Belmont
arena is being built.The Islanders will play 21 home games at the Barclays
Center during the 2018-2019 season.Playing in Brooklyn

The Islanders left Uniondale because they were in an unacceptable situation.
They played in an outdated arena that wasn't working for the team or the fans.
They did not have the support needed from local authorities or the community
for the significant upgrade their building required.  With no other options in
 the New York area, the team signed a 25-year lease to play in the Barclays
Center.

After three seasons in Brooklyn, the team once again finds itself in an
unacceptable situation. Ice conditions at the Barclays Center are terrible.
Arena ownership has no interest in investing the time or money to address
that.  Attendance for games is low. Although the arena can seat 15,795 people
for hockey, average attendance this past season was only 12,002, resting near
the bottom of the league.

Of course, it doesn't help that most of the seats in the West end of the arena
are sold as "limited" view.  For a good number of those seats, the limitation
is that you cannot see the goal below you. Let me repeat that: you cannot see
the goal below you. How can any true hockey fan enjoy a game without being able
 to see the goal?

The root cause for this problem is that the rink does not fit in the arena. Let
 me repeat that: the rink does not fit in the arena. The Barclays Center was
built for basketball only. Placing a hockey rink into it is like squeezing a
king-size bed into a child's bedroom. You may fit it in, but you won't be able
 to open your closets anymore.  On top of that, commuting to games using the
Long Island Railroad turned out not to be as user-friendly as advertised.The
Islanders will play 20 home games at NYCB Live';s recently renovated Nassau
Veterans Memorial Coliseum.  (Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports)Playing on Long
Island

Faced with these problems, it is no wonder that everyone wants to get back to
Long Island. But the NYCB Live's Nassau Coliseum has its challenges too. Until
the Belmont arena deal was secured, even NHL commissioner Gary Bettman was on
record as saying the building was unacceptable for NHL hockey. That is after
the 18-month, $165-million renovation project it underwent after the Islanders
left for Brooklyn.

The new arena boasts an exterior of 4,700 brushed aluminum fins (that remind me
 of the back of an old air conditioner), but underneath that lay the remnants
of the whitewashed "crumbling old building" along with the old problems that
plagued fans during the first go around: overcrowded hallways, long lines for
concessions, and not enough restrooms leading to ever-worsening conditions
during the course of a game.

After the renovations, the outer concourse has been widened, the interior
walkway has been redesigned, and the bathrooms have been remodeled. But seating
 capacity has been reduced to 13,900 ensuring that the team will not be
breaking attendance records in this building either.

At least fans will once again be able to hold tailgate parties in the parking
lot before games, and honk their horns in rhythm to the "Let's Go Islanders"
chant as they fight their way back into the traffic on Hempstead Turnpike after
 games.Barclays Center vs. NYCB Live's Nassau Coliseum

With these two options, it will be interesting to track attendance this season,
 especially for key games. With essentially half of the schedule being played
in each venue, Islanders fans will be splitting time between the arenas like
children of divorced parents shuttling back and forth between two homes. Who
gets the good weekends? Will promotional events be held in both places like two
 Thanksgiving dinners? What happens come playoff time?

What about the players? Will they have a preference for mom's house or dad's
house? Will traveling between two homes wear the team out, like so many extra
road trips? What happens to their home-ice advantage? How will the team be able
 to attract free agents while playing in two arenas? Will this arrangement
truly continue for three years?

The two-home approach raises a lot of questions. The 2018-2019 season will give
 us our first set of answers.

The post Islanders at Home - A House Divided appeared first on The Hockey
Writers.

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheHockeyWrite...
--- SBBSecho 3.05-Win32
 * Origin: TequilaMockingbird Online - Toms River, NJ (1:266/404)
  Show ANSI Codes | Hide BBCodes | Show Color Codes | Hide Encoding | Hide HTML Tags | Show Routing
Previous Message | Next Message | Back to The National Hockey League Discu...  <--  <--- Return to Home Page

VADV-PHP
Execution Time: 0.0818 seconds

If you experience any problems with this website or need help, contact the webmaster.
VADV-PHP Copyright © 2002-2024 Steve Winn, Aspect Technologies. All Rights Reserved.
Virtual Advanced Copyright © 1995-1997 Roland De Graaf.
v2.0.140505

Warning: Unknown: open(c:\Sessions\sess_29eeo0455l7osbeh4rlk1sj8k3, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (c:\Sessions) in Unknown on line 0 PHP Warning: session_start(): open(c:\Sessions\sess_29eeo0455l7osbeh4rlk1sj8k3, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in D:\wc5\http\public\VADV\include\common.inc.php on line 45 PHP Warning: Unknown: open(c:\Sessions\sess_29eeo0455l7osbeh4rlk1sj8k3, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in Unknown on line 0 PHP Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (c:\Sessions) in Unknown on line 0