Should Cornell Build a New Arena?

Started by CornellFan, February 22, 2007, 08:10:53 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

CornellFan

Does anyone else think that Cornell should build a new arena?

I think Cornell would be better served with a larger venue than Newman, say in the 10,000-15,000 seat capacity range.  The new arena could be used for both basketball teams, concerts, notable lectures as well as special events such as graduation related activities.

Newman could then be used exclusively for the volleyball team and basketball practices.

The Friedman Center elevated our wrestling program to a different level.  I think a "mini" NBA type model arena would serve as a MAJOR recruiting tool for Cornell basketball (men's and women's).  It would also give the school a VERY MUCH needed indoor facility for large events.
The Cornell Basketball Blog

http://cornellbasketball.blogspot.com/

Chris '03

No. It's great the basketball is drawing pretty well this year, but I've been to too many games in Newman with so few fans it feels like the space is way too big. If you tripled capacity you'd get that feeling for every game. Ivy league basketball will not draw 10-15k fans nor will all but the most exceptional lectures/concerts.

As point of comparison, the hockey game @ OSU back at the start of the '02-'03 season had a crowd of 3-5k in a building that holds 15k+ and it was a bad experience. Unless you have very very good reason to think you can fill the space, forget it.

Finally, where would you put the thing?
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."

Josh '99

[quote Chris '03]As point of comparison, the hockey game @ OSU back at the start of the '02-'03 season had a crowd of 3-5k in a building that holds 15k+ and it was a bad experience. Unless you have very very good reason to think you can fill the space, forget it.

Finally, where would you put the thing?[/quote]A building that size would look WAAAAY out of place on Cornell's campus.  (Which is, as you point out, moot, because there's literally no space for it.)
"They do all kind of just blend together into one giant dildo."
-Ben Rocky 04

jtwcornell91

[quote Josh '99][quote Chris '03]As point of comparison, the hockey game @ OSU back at the start of the '02-'03 season had a crowd of 3-5k in a building that holds 15k+ and it was a bad experience. Unless you have very very good reason to think you can fill the space, forget it.

Finally, where would you put the thing?[/quote]A building that size would look WAAAAY out of place on Cornell's campus.  (Which is, as you point out, moot, because there's literally no space for it.)[/quote]

They could put it underground.  Then it might get nicknamed "The Dungeon". B-]

Chris '03

[quote jtwcornell91][quote Josh '99][quote Chris '03]As point of comparison, the hockey game @ OSU back at the start of the '02-'03 season had a crowd of 3-5k in a building that holds 15k+ and it was a bad experience. Unless you have very very good reason to think you can fill the space, forget it.

Finally, where would you put the thing?[/quote]A building that size would look WAAAAY out of place on Cornell's campus.  (Which is, as you point out, moot, because there's literally no space for it.)[/quote]

They could put it underground.  Then it might get nicknamed "The Dungeon". B-][/quote]

The they could build the necessary parking garage on top of it.
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."

CornellFan

I buy into the argument that Cornell may not be able to fill a 15,000 seat building to crowd capacity, but do we really have a land issue?  It seems to me that Cornell can easily obtain the additional land or build over a track of land that we already own but under-utilize.

Would alumni still feel the arena would be too big if it were an 8,000 seat capacity (roughly equiv to Penn's Palestra)?

I just happen to think that Newman Arena is inadequate in terms of its current capacity and layout.

While I have nothing against the Fieldhouse, it is actually quite a nice facility by Ivy standards, I just think the University did a poor job designing Newman Arena.

Bucknell's basketball facility is so much nicer and feels like a small arena with the way the crowd wraps around the court.

http://bucknellbison.cstv.com/genrel/051506aad.html?pic=28

Perhaps they could do some type of extension/remodel job of Newman so that rows/seats can be added behind each basket, thereby increasing the capacity from 4750 to potentially 6,000.

Cornell basketball has the very real potential of becoming Cornell's biggest revenue sport.  Our administration has yet to grasp that concept.
The Cornell Basketball Blog

http://cornellbasketball.blogspot.com/

ugarte

[quote CornellFan]Does anyone else think that Cornell should build a new arena?

I think Cornell would be better served with a larger venue than Newman, say in the 10,000-15,000 seat capacity range.  The new arena could be used for both basketball teams, concerts, notable lectures as well as special events such as graduation related activities.

Newman could then be used exclusively for the volleyball team and basketball practices.

The Friedman Center elevated our wrestling program to a different level.  I think a "mini" NBA type model arena would serve as a MAJOR recruiting tool for Cornell basketball (men's and women's).  It would also give the school a VERY MUCH needed indoor facility for large events.[/quote]
No. A thousand times no. Cornell is a school not a goddamn athletics program. I'm glad the basketball team is finally winning but one above-.500 season is not grounds to break out the checkbook and build a monument to being better-than-crap.

Ithaca is not Philadelphia. Cornell doesn't need - and couldn't make good use of - a Palestra. The campus already has Barton and Bailey (and Newman, for that matter) for concerts and lectures. It doesn't matter how much Cornell invests in hoops; it is unlikely to be more successful as a program than an occassional Ivy title and a first-round loss to the winner of a major conference. This may be depressing to you, CornellFan - but that should actually be the goal of Cornell basketball and the spending should reflect that.

Chris '03

I'm not going to agree with you that CU needs a new arena. I have, however, always thought Newman had little character and seemed like a big high school gym. That said, I'm sure there are plenty of priorities ahead of a remodel, especially one that would give the place more empty seats when the program returns to the ground.
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."

Ben Rocky '04

[quote ugarte][quote CornellFan]Does anyone else think that Cornell should build a new arena?

I think Cornell would be better served with a larger venue than Newman, say in the 10,000-15,000 seat capacity range.  The new arena could be used for both basketball teams, concerts, notable lectures as well as special events such as graduation related activities.

Newman could then be used exclusively for the volleyball team and basketball practices.

The Friedman Center elevated our wrestling program to a different level.  I think a "mini" NBA type model arena would serve as a MAJOR recruiting tool for Cornell basketball (men's and women's).  It would also give the school a VERY MUCH needed indoor facility for large events.[/quote]
No. A thousand times no. Cornell is a school not a goddamn athletics program. I'm glad the basketball team is finally winning but one above-.500 season is not grounds to break out the checkbook and build a monument to being better-than-crap.

Ithaca is not Philadelphia. Cornell doesn't need - and couldn't make good use of - a Palestra. The campus already has Barton and Bailey (and Newman, for that matter) for concerts and lectures. It doesn't matter how much Cornell invests in hoops; it is unlikely to be more successful as a program than an occassional Ivy title and a first-round loss to the winner of a major conference. This may be depressing to you, CornellFan - but that should actually be the goal of Cornell basketball and the spending should reflect that.[/quote]

Look at the photo of Bucknell's facility.  They sold out the game, and I'd imagine they didn't shoot their admissions standards with a shotgun to do it.  I'm not pushing for a new facility until we can fill the old one, but I think CornellFan is right.  It can't be impossible to expand our reach and find more talented b-ball players who can cut it academically here, and I have no objection to CU having other sports that aren't Big-10-big, but are at least major draws on campus. Sports are part of American college life, they increase student's school pride, and being in rink or basketball arena with thousands of other undergraduates on a Friday night in February in Ithaca is what being a Cornellian is all about.

Ugarte, you are correct that the best we can hope for is an Ivy title every few years, and a first round lost in the big dance, but whatever, I'm fine with that; in fact, I'd be proud of it.

RichH

[quote ugarte]
No. A thousand times no. Cornell is a school not a goddamn athletics program. I'm glad the basketball team is finally winning but one above-.500 season is not grounds to break out the checkbook and build a monument to being better-than-crap.[/quote]

Well said.  That building is new enough and acceptable enough for the sport that I see no reason to pour millions into a new facility.  Yeah, so the multi-purpose design kinda sucks, and it doesn't give as much of a home court advantage as say Lynah or the Palestra, but we had our chance in 1990 when it was being built.  It's a bit antiseptic, but that's what was decided.  Tough noogies.

I also think Friedman was a colossal boondoggle and completely unnecessary when Newmann was just fine for wrestling.  

University priorities should be about providing world-class educational/research facilities and adequate athletic/recreational resources.  Not vice-versa.

If some athletic facility becomes woefully outdated and inadequate, I'm all in favor of spending the money to bring it back up to modern standards...which is why I supported the new track and soccer field whole-heartedly.  Newman isn't in that category.  I'm a huge lacrosse fan, and while it would be fantastic to have a lax-only stadium like Princeton has, there's nothing wrong with playing at Schoellkopf, so I would be opposed to any such plans.

Personally, I'd like to see CU basketball stage a "turn back the clock" night and play one game in Barton Hall.

KeithK

I think you want to think very carefully before expanding an arena.  As Chris pointed out, OSU hockey plays in front of a 2/3 empty building even when they get good crowds because their arena is too big.  Even Lynah is not necessarily selling out this year with the larger capacity.  All it takes is a slight down tick in performance or uptick in prices and you might not fill the building.  I'd rather have a packed arena that is small than a larger one with empty seats, even if the overall crowd was bigger.

Basketball probably needs to sustain a level of success for a number of years before it makes sense to talk about improving facilties again or expanding capacity.  I haven't looked at the attendance figures but I doubt it's a hard ticket to get.  Not that they couldn't sell out Newman, but the program isnt' there yet.

I do disagree that bball will ever supplant hockey in terms of revenue/popularity at Cornell based on the fact that Cornell can be a legitimate national contender and has the history.  I do think that Cornell could build a hoops program that could be consistently challenging for the Ivy title and periodically gives a good show in March.  The P schools have done this so there's no reason why we couldn't.  It's not easy to build a program like that starting from long term mediocrity but with the right mix of people it can proabbly be done.

KeithK

[quote RichH]Personally, I'd like to see CU basketball stage a "turn back the clock" night and play one game in Barton Hall.[/quote]I'd love to see that too.  Since I'm pretty much not a basketball fan I never made it to a game in Barton my freshman year before the move to Alberding.  (I think I only made it to one game there too - a woeful loss to Princeton IIRC. Didn't seem worth spending money on more of that.)

KeithK

[quote CornellFan]I buy into the argument that Cornell may not be able to fill a 15,000 seat building to crowd capacity, but do we really have a land issue?  It seems to me that Cornell can easily obtain the additional land or build over a track of land that we already own but under-utilize./quote]Cornell certainly can obtain extra land when necessary, if the money is available.  But where is this land going to be?  They've already built a softball field far away from central campus and possibly another sport too (can't remember).  Yes, they could build a new massive arena somewhere east of the Vet school, but do you really think a lot of students are going to make that trek on a Friday night?  They might if the team were tourney caliber, but I think distance would make it a lot harder to build fan support for a developing program.

Now, you could just do what they have been doing - fill up all available space on central campus with buildings.  Personally I'd rather not have a big sports arena plunked down in the middle of the Arts Quad.

CornellFan

In the "old days" of Barton Hall, how did Cornell set up the bleachers with respect to the indoor track?

I was actually a proponent a few years ago (on the Ivybasketball.com message board) of moving Cornell basketball back to Barton.

I believe Barton (1914) is older than the Palestra and if we were to use it full time for basketball, it would be the oldest in-use gym in the country.

Barton also has a great atmosphere and with a bit of refurbishing could be a great place to play full time.  I also believe Barton holds more than Newman.  It has "permanent" seating for 4,800, but I believe can get up to 5,500 for a basketball game type set-up.

I am just curious how the stands were arranged in relation to the track.
The Cornell Basketball Blog

http://cornellbasketball.blogspot.com/

Chris '03

[quote RichH]
Personally, I'd like to see CU basketball stage a "turn back the clock" night and play one game in Barton Hall.[/quote]

I think that would be a lot of fun. Coach Donahue has an old black and white photo of a Syracuse AT?!?! Cornell game played in Barton ages ago in front of an overflow crowd. If I recall, all the fans were wearing shirts and ties too. I'll settle for the overflow crowd and a home game vs. Syracuse. :-P
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."