Article from today's San Jose Mercury News:
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/sports/12152023.htm
Potential is there for Sacramento to gain major league team
BY JOE STIGLICH
Knight Ridder Newspapers
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - (KRT) - Paul Gonzales floats five miles down the Sacramento River on his cabin cruiser before every River Cats home game, walks across the Tower Bridge and settles into his Raley Field seats to cheer on his team.
It's a tradition going on six years for Gonzales, who lives in Rocklin but keeps his boat docked near Raley Field.
He's been a Sacramento River Cats season-ticket holder ever since the Triple-A baseball franchise re-located from Vancouver to the capital city before the 2000 season.
Someday, Gonzales would love for his journey to lead him to a major league stadium.
"We've been starving for baseball for a long time," Gonzales said.
The River Cats, who serve as the A's Triple-A affiliate, have won back-to-back Pacific Coast League titles. They've also led the minor leagues in attendance since 2000, regularly packing 14,680-seat Raley Field.
Fans such as Gonzales see this and believe it's evidence that Sacramento is ready for a major league franchise.
The city often gets mentioned when rumors circulate about the A's leaving Oakland.
In the late 1990s, Sacramento explored the possibility of landing an expansion team.
Can't you just see Arnold Schwarzenegger firing out the ceremonial first pitch for Sacramento's own big league team?
But to some it's a dream, and an irrelevant one at that.
"Nobody is really thinking in that regard any longer," said John McCasey, executive director of the Sacramento Sports Commission. "(The River Cats) have filled that void. Everyone is content."
According to Greg Van Dusen, who helped negotiate the deal that delivered the NBA's Kings from Kansas City to Sacramento in 1985, the city holds great potential for major league baseball.
"I think the market has grown tremendously since those days," Van Dusen said. "It's very ripe. The weather is terrific. There are (stadium) sights available."
But building a stadium could be a roadblock to big league baseball ever arriving in the capital.
Plans for building a baseball venue in Sacramento date as far back as 1979, with Gregg Lukenbill spearheading the effort.
Among the proposed sites for a stadium was a piece of land next to Arco Arena, where construction was started several years ago before plans were abandoned.
"You can still see the concrete outline of the grandstands," River Cats fan Ryan Koledin said. "If they had finished that, we'd have a team now. We might have gotten the A's."
Van Dusen still believes the land around Arco Arena is the ideal site for a stadium if the financing were available for it.
"The major hang up in the Sacramento market always has been the public sector's hesitance to be involved in any way, other than a regulatory fashion, in the development of facilities," he said.
Stadium difficulties aside, there are River Cats fans who believe Sacramento would support a major league team.
Koledin, who has lived in Sacramento since 1956, said he hasn't been to a Giants or A's game since 1968. He prefers to cheer on local teams, such as the Kings and various Sacramento State squads.
"(The River Cats) get about 10,000 for a game," Koledin said. "You'd have to get 20-30,000 for a major league game. They could probably get the attendance. If the team was halfway decent, they'd keep coming too."
Dori McKirgan stood outside Raley Field during the Triple-A All-Star Game festivities last week and talked passionately about Sacramento deserving a big league team.
The Fair Oaks resident said her family regularly makes the long car ride to watch the Giants and A's.
"Baseball is so big here," McKirgan said. "We've got more traveling (youth) teams in (Sacramento) county than all the surrounding counties put together."
According to
www.census.gov, Sacramento's population of 454,330 ranked seventh among California cities in 2004.
But Van Dusen thinks it's the outlying areas around the city that hold the promise of potential ticket buyers.
"A lot of the economic growth is just east of Sacramento," he said. "Placer County, which is just booming, from a financial standpoint is like Orange County North."
If fan knowledge and passion count for anything, Tucson Sidewinders pitcher Jason Bulger thinks Sacramento meets the major league requirement.
Bulger was in Sacramento playing in the Triple-A All-Star Game.
"I love this city. The fans are amazing," Bulger said. "It's a great baseball town. I think they know the game a little bit better. They recognize good plays. I don't think you get this in a lot of cities."