The deeper we get into the 21st
century names that have grown synonymous with the OHL like the
Peterborough Memorial Centre, Sudbury Arena, Bayshore arena and
Kitchener Memorial Auditorium have grown fewer and fewer. With the
arena boom that was kicked off by the Barrie Colts cities looking for
new revenue streams started attaching corporate sponsors to their
arena names.
Arena's in most OHL cities tend to be a
focal point for the community and in most cases were memorials for
those who served Canada in war. While it is hard for the sentimentalist
in us to swallow some of these corporate names the tax payers in most
of us can see the logic behind them.
Out of the 20 teams in the OHL 17 are
located in Ontario. Of those 17 teams 12 play in arenas with
corporate names attached to them. The names of the Windsor Arena,
London Ice House, Soo Memorial Gardens and Copps Coliseum are long
gone. In their place is the WFCU Centre, Budweiser Gardens, Essar
Center and First Ontario Centre.
Only the 4 arenas from the opening
Paragraph ( Peterborough, Sudbury, Owen Sound and Kitchener) and the
North Bay Memorial Gardens lack the commercialization that has
touched their OHL cousins. With some of those teams in the market for
new arenas in the near future and 4 current teams about to have their
current naming rights expire by 2018 I thought this was the perfect
time to look into the various naming rights deals signed by arena's
across the OHL.
With deals signed in different years I
took out my trusty Texas Instruments BAII Plus calculator and found
the present and future values of these rights deals. A deal today
signed for $170,000 a year sure sounds a lot nicer then a deal signed
10 years ago for $160,000 a year but it is easy to forget that
$170,000 today is worth a lot less then $170,000 10 years ago and the
opposite is true for $160,000 10 years ago compared to $160,000
today.
Where I could I found information on
who received the money and if any went to the various teams or if the
naming rights money only went to the city or another organization.
Finally some naming rights deals have added benefits to it. For
example the WFCU Centre and the Meridian Centre only have ATM
machines in their building from those financial institutions. While
the Budweiser Gardens and Sleemans Centre also come with the pour
rights for those beers (Pour rights can bring in as much as $50,000 a
year just for the right to serve a particular brand of beer at an
arena).
average naming rights dollars brought in per year from various arena's around the OHL |
Naming Rights adjusted to 2016 dollars |
Ranking OHL Arena Rights in 2016
Dollars
London Knights – Budweiser Gardens
$610,073 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 years $6.4 million total
Signed in 2012
Far and away the largest naming rights
deal in the OHL. The deal likely includes the pour rights for
Budweiser products but even when you take that into account (it will
be some of the highest in the league due to the high attendence and
usage of the arena) the money generated from the Arena name is large.
Very few teams get a piece of the naming rights money but I would be
interested to see if the Knights get any as they are a big reason why
the City of London is able to get so much for this.
Hamilton Bulldogs – First Ontario
Centre
327,091 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 years $3.5 millon total
Signed in 2014
This is an interesting rights deal as
the city of Hamilton gets none of the money from it. Well not
directly anyways. Global Spectrum the bane of Bulldogs fans exictince
and the company in charge of running what will always be Copps
Colisium is the main benefactor.
Oshawa Generals – Communities
Tributes Centre
224,564 AAV in 2016 dollars (according
to sources)
10 years $2.5 million total (according
to sources)
Signed in 2016
The newest deal signed in the OHL and
also the only unconfirmed number. For some reason Oshawa is very
tight lipped about its naming rights deals. Even the numbers for when
GM was the sponsor were hard to get ahold of. The rumoured total for
the Communities Tributes Centre (the only home builder to acquire
naming rights) is 2.5 million over 10 years. In 2016 dollars this
comes out to approx 2.24 million over 10 years. The deal for GM was
1.5 million over 10 years which in 2016 dollars was worth approx 1.81
million. If the rumoured numbers are true then the city of Oshawa did
a very good job with an increase of 23.75% in 2016 dollars. With 4
teams entering new deals in the next 4 years it will be interesting
to see if others can reach these numbers.
It should be noted that the previous deal for GM was not a straight cash deal. Only 77K a year was cash while the approximate 87K remaining was "indirect financial benefits" which could be why the city kept it under wraps.
Windsor Spitfires – WFCU Centre
$189,373 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 years $1.75 million total (payments
made quarterly)
Signed in 2008
The 2nd of 3 community
credit unions on this list. The payment for which is made quarterly
as opposed to yearly which is the case for most arena naming rights
based on my research. With the increase in rights fees to Oshawa
recently it puts the city of Windsor in a nice position. Personally I
can't see anyone else stepping up and surpassing WFCU as they are
rather entrentched in the community.
Kingston Frontnacs – K-Rock Cenre
$186,145 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 years $1.7 million total
Signed in 2007
Expires after this season so we could
be looking at a new arena name in Kingston if K-Rock doesnt renew.
Cant see that happening though due to their partnership with the
Fronts as well as the potential synergy that goes along with a radio
station and an entertainment venue. I found 2 sets of numbers when it
came to the naming rights. The Durham news reported a deal worth 3.3
million a year, a number which is quite outragous. In the feasability
study for the Niagara arena done by accounting firm Deloitte the
number was pegged at 1.7 million a year over 10 years which is more
in line with the arena deals signed at the time.
Sault Ste Marie Greyhounds – Essar
Centre
$179,263 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 Years $ 1.5 million total (Total
paid upfront in 1st year)
Signed in 2008
Another unique deal as this was paid
in full in the first year. All 1.5 million dollars. Because of this
the value of this deal increases greatly and was a very shrewd
business move by the city of Sault Ste. Marie. In fact it blew the
previous agreement with Steelback Breweries out of the water, a deal
which was voided after the second payment was missed. On top of that
the city of Sault Ste Marie was able to shop the pour rights for beer
at the arena which added even more money to the cities cauffers. Now
this deal expires after next season and you will likely be seeing a
new name. Essar has been a little slow in paying their 14 million
dollar tax bill to the city.
Niagara Icedogs – Meridian Centre
$178,244 AAV in 2016 dollars
15 years $3 million total
Signed in 2014
In terms of actual dollars prior to
discounting the Icedogs contract is actually the 2nd
highest in the OHL. After the original 15 years is up there is an
option to increase the deal by 10 years with a 2% compounding
escaleter per year. This would bring the dollar total to just north
of 5.2 million over 25 years. For the puropse of this I only used the
15 year 3 million dollar contract.
While the $200,000 a year is nice the
length of the contract causes the final years to be worth not as much
in 2016 dollars which is why its AAV in said dollars is lower then
most other deals. The big thing with the length though is that some
teams will be able to sign 2 more rights deals potentially with
increases before St Catherines can look to rework their contract.
While Oshawas total is rumoured it is considerably higher then what
Meridian pays.
At the end of the day the city of St
Catherines did very well with the dollar total that they got. The
length could come back to haunt them but they have cost certainty
with this deal for 15 maybe even 25 years. From a political stand
point they can spout a munch of mumbo jumbo about it being worth
north of 5 million dollars even though from a present value
perspective that is far far far from the case.
Guelph Storm – Sleemans Centre
$90,040 AAV in 2016 dollars
13 years $1.1 million total
Signed in 2007
Sleemans Breweries took over exclusive
naming rights of what was then the Guelph Sports and Entertainment
Centre. Quite a few deals were signed form 2007 to 2008 and the
Sleemans Centre turned out to be for the lowest total and yearly
amount as well as the longest. While Kingston, Windsor and Sault Ste.
Marie all had 10 year terms the Sleemans Centre's deal is for 13. The
AAV is one of only 2 under 100k a year.
Sarnia Sting - Progressive Auto Sales Arena
$39,021 AAV in 2016 dollars
10 years $434,415 total
Signed in 2016
I honestly dont know what to say about
this deal that was signed in Sarnia. This is an incredibly low total
that the city of Sarnia snagged. On top of that the revenue is split
between the city and the OHL team with approx 23K going to the city
and 19K going to the team. Most deals come with perks such as suites
and tickets but as mentioned in the Sarnia Observer these perks for
Progressive Auto Sales which include a suite and 12 season tickets
has an annual value of about 30K which is more than 66% of what they
pay for the naming rights.
Barrie and Mississauga
I couldn't find any recent information
on Barrie and Mississauga. All I was able to find on the Colts home
is that the contract with Molson is up in 2018 so they could be in
the market for a new arena name along with Sault Ste. Marie and
Windsor.
As for Mississauga I was only able to
find that they had a 10 year agreement worth $190.000 expire in 2008.
Obviously Hershey's reupped but that was a very good deal for the
time. While the Hershey centre may not be a big draw for OHL hockey
it has some advantages that allow for high naming rights fee. For
starters it is along a busy stretch of highway. While the location
for fans attending games leaves a lot to be desired it is perfect for
maximizing naming rights. Secondly it is a very well used facility.
The Steelheads may be the anchor tenant but the city of Mississauga
has done a good job of maximizing its use.
What will we see in the future?
Kingston is up for a new contract after
this season. Barrie, Windsor and Sault Ste. Marie are up for a new
contract after 2017-18. Sudbury seems to be moving ahead with a new
arena and Peterborough is having some financial difficulty which may
spur the city into looking at a new arena that is more cost efficient
with new revenue streams. Niagara and Oshawa seem to have set the bar
with deals that bring in north of 200K a year and will be a starting
point for any city as they look to maximize revenue oppertunities.
I know you were doing just Canadian cities but in Saginaw we're getting $420,000 a year ($4.2 Mil over 10 years) from Dow Chemical for TheDow Event Center
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