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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Officially putting a spade into the dirt at the site of the $115 million pro soccer stadium on Monday in Chester begins a new phase for a team that is scheduled to begin play in Major League Soccer in 2010.

Thomas Veit of MLSPhilly2010 said yesterday that fans should know before the end of the month how much tickets will cost, then a name-the-team contest will follow early in the new year. By spring, this franchise should have a name and what amounts to a logo and colors.

Veit said they’ve been reviewing the prices of MLS teams across the league as they land on a range of prices that appeals to all sectors of the base that they hope to attract.

“We want to make sure that everybody has an ability to come, regardless or price, and we want to make sure that people who want the amenities [can get them,]” he said. “There was a tradition for a long time in Philadelphia of guys that could be the trash hauler sitting next to the CEO, and so one of the things we worked really hard on in ticket pricing is that we’re going to have suites and we’re going to have club seats and other stuff that people want to spend money on, but we don’t want to isolate the common out fan, too. So we’ve been stacking our areas where, ‘hey, there are VIP areas and that’s great, but just because you’re not going to buy a club seat doesn’t mean that you’re not going to have an opportunity to sit on the sidelines right on the middle of the field in the front row, because we can do that somewhere else in the middle part of the stadium.

“So we’ve been working real hard on providing a broad range to allow everybody, to have the people who want to spend the money and have the big, padded seat and can go to the club. And the guy that wants to still sit in a great seat, but doesn’t really worry bout wanting to go to a club but would rather go for a hot dog with his kids . . . then that Philly tradition of having a diverse group of people all sitting together is something we really worked hard on. I think we’ve gotten there and we’re in the final stretches of having those prices finalized where people [know what they’ll be paying.]”

The franchise says that about 6,000 people have made deposits for tickets, which to this point have yet to be quantified. “The amazing ting about those seat deposits,” Veit said, “is that they did it without knowing what the price of the tickets would be. So I would say that the pricing of the tickets and the scale of where they’re going to be and how much they’re going to cost in the sections is probably the next thing you’re going to see come out, and you’re probably see that before the end of the year, and after that will be the logos and names and the colors and things like that.”

As a way to compare, tickets to see D.C. United range in cost from $1400 to $200 for a full season on action, which includes 15 league games and five international games. That team also offers half-season and flex plans (eight vouchers). The range is similar for the New York Range Bulls, with a 20-game package going from almost $1100 down to $272.

Meanwhile, officials continue to whittle down potential names. It hasn’t been easy, Veit said, “Every name in the known universe is being used by someone, somehow, somewhere,” he said. “Frankly, we started with over 135 names, and we’ve been vetting them out between what ownership liked and other people we’ve talked to.” The ultimate goal is to get it down to four possible names for the team that are not patented “or is close enough where we know we can get the trademarks and used them legally.”

The plan, Veit said, is to launch the naming contest sometime in January, where fans can vote online -- and possibly through a sponsor if those arrangements are completed – for one of the four names, or they can submit one of their own. Once the name is chosen, they’ll move on to how the jersey will look, including its colors, and what markings or badges will be included in the makeup of the uniform.

“In soccer, you have a couple different things,” he said. “First we’ll have a word mark and we’ll have a badge. The badge will get created later because the badge really isn’t specific to the name at times; if you look at a lot of the different teams it’s symbols and things more than that. But once we have the team name we’ll come up with the word mark look, the colors, and put that all together, and reveal that, and we’ll probably do that sometime early to mid first quarter.”

All the while the stadium should start to take shape down on the Chester waterfront, something that should be noticeable as folks drive by early in 2009.

“I would say sometime in the next few months,” he said. “You drive by now and you see a complete change in what it was. We have some before and after pictures and it’s amazing. There’s been a whole metamorphosis on the site land and I think you’ll start seeing stuff out of the ground pretty quick.”  

Posted by Paul Vigna @ 10:22 PM  Permalink | 8 comments
8
Comments   
Posted 01:37 PM, 12/04/2008
PHILLYUNITEDFLY
"Range Bulls" is an excellent name for the Red Bulls although EDs (Energy Drinks) and Pink Cows are still solid too! They should be put out of their misery on the "range"!!!
Posted 05:44 PM, 12/04/2008
The Time Is Now
I have suggested this name for the new club and been shot down on numerous occasions, but in the realm of uniqueness, I think it is. I don't think I have seen many if any teams with this name. Is the suspense killing you yet, here goes............ Defenders. PHILADELPHIA DEFENDERS FC, coming to Cheater waterfront 2010.
Posted 11:06 AM, 12/07/2008
Rogo99
Part 1 First, let me say that nobody is a bigger booster of Chester than I am. My family had a business there for over 30 years, and I have family members who grew up there. We have many contacts and remember Chester's heyday. The fact that lifting up Chester will lift up Chester Township is daunting. However, using a soccer stadium as the centerpiece of a redevelopment project is a LOSER. Some of the ideas put forth by the boosters are not necessarily sensible, and when the team folds, as many already have, you'll be left with a multi-million dollar white elephant. For instance, "they" have been trying to shove soccer down the throats of the American sports fan for years. The experiment that is David Beckham is a colossal flop. When the youngsters playing the game grow up and discover that it's more fun to play than watch, they'll lose interest. The idea that a growing Latin American population will buy tickets for their national game is also not necessarily correct. The Latin American people I work with are more fans of their country's teams, and identify that way. The name "Philadelphia" (or "Chester") on their jerseys will mean little to them. And, as noted in an article published a couple of years ago in the San Diego Union-Tribune, 2005 average attendance at MLS games averaged just about 10,000 paid, and franchises give tickets away to the tune of an average of 3900 per match, and almost 600,000 over the season leaguewide. The highest average paid attendance is in pre-Beckham Los Angeles, where the average is just under 20,000 tickets sold. The MLS routinely "papers the house" with the freebies, and announces attendance figures higher than the actual amount. (http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/soccer/20060927-9999-lz1s27goal.html) To see how the surrounding businesses that might depend on attendance would fare, you don't have to go any further than Wilmington's Shipyard Shops, a great idea that now has 4 or 5 stores left after a great start.
Posted 11:10 AM, 12/07/2008
Rogo99
Part 2: My idea would be to use the money to build a new 10-12,000 seat all-year-'round arena, along the lines of the Sovereign Centers in Reading and Trenton, or the Giant Center in Hershey, as the centerpiece of the development. With the demise of the Spectrum, this would be a venue that could attract the Phantoms (5000-8000 people over 40 nights), the circus, indoor soccer, conventions, the concerts and other events that populate that building now. If you think about it, that is a much better use for the land and taxpayer money than a structure being used a couple of dozen times per year. With Chester's hopes riding on this development, we cannot afford to it have fail. I have great admiration for the investors in this soccer project, but past experience is the best indicator for future success. Thank you for your attention, I hope that the few thousand fans profiled in your article enjoy the team while it's here. Obviously there is more riding on the team's success than entertaining them. This letter was sent to Senator Pileggi, and the Delco Times, where it was published in March '08.
Posted 08:15 PM, 01/23/2009
Photothug
where are all the name possibilities? What about FC Liberty or Liberty FC? Is that corny? too obvious maybe. Sounds euro to me though. Apparently there is some rec league in Ohio known as Liberty FC and a girls team from Sweden as FC Liberty but I am sure they could share the name. I don't think it needs to have the word Philadelphia in there does it? What about Penn City FC?
Posted 10:44 AM, 01/24/2009
startinggoalie
while i admire mlsphilly for trying to sound euro, like dc united and real salt lake, only one name captures both the rich history of our most famous philadelphian AND rewards the sons of ben for their success - the team must be called the philadelphia franklins!
Posted 07:49 AM, 02/28/2009
soccerdad1150
Rogo 99 -- nice try. Deal is done and you lost.
Posted 04:11 PM, 05/07/2009
PhillyHockeyBuff
When I can get settled in Allentown in the next few months and I get my money together, I'm gonna put down money for season tickets for myself! I've NEVER had those before, but really look forward to it! I HAD been a fan of the MetroStars and their former GM and current Philly GM, Nick Sakiewicz, but having a team in my own backyard, almost, is just as good! I love the Phils, Flyers and Sixers and am more than ready to make this my newest favorite team! Hoping to be a season ticket holder for sure and have great times along with the Sons of Ben too!
About Paul Vigna
Paul Vigna still has the seat he wrestled out of the concrete at Connie Mack Stadium parked in the finished basement, a 1980 Phillies championship mirror hanging above it. Now, why he’s kept an autograph of former Flyer Bruce Gamble on a sheet of Hockey Hall of Fame paper is another story. A native of Philly who grew up in Lansdale, he’s an assistant sports editor at the Daily News in charge of special projects who has written two columns related to sports and consumers: View From the Seats and Savvy Consumer.

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