San Diego fails to deliver on promises for next year's Super Bowl
July 14, 2002
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- San Diego is failing to deliver on a number of promises it made to the NFL for next year's Super Bowl. ADVERTISEMENT
The league will not get the number of usable seats it wanted, renovations to the visiting locker room or upgrades to the press box and audio/visual control room in time for the January game.
Jim Steeg, an NFL vice president, acknowledged that it is not uncommon for host cities to fail to live up to all of their commitments. But he said the difference between what San Diego promised and what it's delivering is wider than most.
``This is as big (a gap) as we've had in recent years,'' Steeg said.
The NFL has been pressing San Diego to fulfill its promises, saying they are ``critical to the NFL's commitment to have the Super Bowl in San Diego.''
Most important to league officials was the guarantee that there would be 70,000 acceptable seats.
Qualcomm Stadium has slightly more than 70,500 seats, but the NFL discounts the bottom seven rows because of obstructed views, eliminating more than 2,000 from the total.
Delays in construction of the San Diego Padres' downtown ballpark kept the baseball team playing in Qualcomm longer than expected, and workers could not get access to the stadium to add more seats, city officials said.
The city's bid specifies that the host committee will spend as much as $1.6 million to get to 70,000 acceptable seats. With that goal unattainable, the parties have agreed that the committee will just pay the NFL the $1.6 million to offset lost ticket revenue.
In addition, the San Diego Super Bowl XXXVII Host Committee still has not signed a contract binding them to the promises made when the city was bidding for the game. Officials with the NFL, the host committee and the city say former San Diego Mayor Susan Golding promised too much when the city bid for the game.
The city has spent $2.8 million on Super Bowl-related improvements at Qualcomm in recent years. The stadium's older seats have been replaced and the sound system has been upgraded.
Some $500,000 was spent making cosmetic fixes to the visiting team's locker room, which Steeg called ``one of the worst in the NFL.'' But that fell short of the $2.6 million major renovation promised by the city.
July 14, 2002
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- San Diego is failing to deliver on a number of promises it made to the NFL for next year's Super Bowl. ADVERTISEMENT
The league will not get the number of usable seats it wanted, renovations to the visiting locker room or upgrades to the press box and audio/visual control room in time for the January game.
Jim Steeg, an NFL vice president, acknowledged that it is not uncommon for host cities to fail to live up to all of their commitments. But he said the difference between what San Diego promised and what it's delivering is wider than most.
``This is as big (a gap) as we've had in recent years,'' Steeg said.
The NFL has been pressing San Diego to fulfill its promises, saying they are ``critical to the NFL's commitment to have the Super Bowl in San Diego.''
Most important to league officials was the guarantee that there would be 70,000 acceptable seats.
Qualcomm Stadium has slightly more than 70,500 seats, but the NFL discounts the bottom seven rows because of obstructed views, eliminating more than 2,000 from the total.
Delays in construction of the San Diego Padres' downtown ballpark kept the baseball team playing in Qualcomm longer than expected, and workers could not get access to the stadium to add more seats, city officials said.
The city's bid specifies that the host committee will spend as much as $1.6 million to get to 70,000 acceptable seats. With that goal unattainable, the parties have agreed that the committee will just pay the NFL the $1.6 million to offset lost ticket revenue.
In addition, the San Diego Super Bowl XXXVII Host Committee still has not signed a contract binding them to the promises made when the city was bidding for the game. Officials with the NFL, the host committee and the city say former San Diego Mayor Susan Golding promised too much when the city bid for the game.
The city has spent $2.8 million on Super Bowl-related improvements at Qualcomm in recent years. The stadium's older seats have been replaced and the sound system has been upgraded.
Some $500,000 was spent making cosmetic fixes to the visiting team's locker room, which Steeg called ``one of the worst in the NFL.'' But that fell short of the $2.6 million major renovation promised by the city.
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