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Pony Up or Shut Up!

Here is a statement put out today by the Indianapolis Colts.  If these guys aren’t going to contribute to keep Lucas Oil open, the least they could do is STFU.

Thursday,April 23

COLTS STATEMENT ON THE CIB

By Colts.com

Dear Colts Fans:

Much has been reported and communicated about the Colts over the past several months, including several statements which have been either misleading or simply untrue. We would like to set the record straight by sharing with you facts of the Colts’ financial contributions to the State of Indiana and the City of Indianapolis and the club’s significant investment in the building and on-going operation of Lucas Oil Stadium.

First and foremost, the Indianapolis Colts have not sought in the past, nor is the club currently seeking, any special favors from the CIB, the City of Indianapolis, or the State of Indiana.

The Colts never asked for a new stadium. In 2004, the City of Indianapolis approached the Colts about the possibility of a new stadium, not the other way around. The City’s need for an expanded convention center and desire to accommodate the NCAA for future Final Fours prompted its exploration of a facility to replace the RCA Dome. At no time did the Colts threaten to leave Indianapolis or otherwise “hold the city hostage.”

The Colts negotiated in good faith with the State and the City and eventually entered into a development agreement with the Indiana Stadium and Convention Building Authority (ISCBA), governing the construction of Lucas Oil Stadium, and a lease with the CIB, governing the Colts’ use of the stadium.

The Colts made a 30-year commitment to the community. Those written agreements, signed nearly four years ago, committed the team to this community for the next 30 years with no option to renegotiate, regardless of any financial downturns that might arise.

The Colts agreed to take the risk and responsibility to achieve financial success in Indianapolis. The new agreements also removed the financial guarantees for the Colts that existed in our RCA Dome lease that could have cost the city tens of millions of dollars on a regular basis. In essence, the risk of financial success in a small market has been shifted from the city solely to the Colts.

The Colts have been meticulous in meeting and, indeed, often exceeding the requirements of those agreements. We have contributed over $100 Million to the construction of the facility and it is simply untrue for anyone to suggest we don’t have “skin in the game.”

It is also important to note that, from the very beginning, Lucas Oil Stadium was designed to be a multi-use facility to accommodate many users, not just the Colts. Already, the stadium has successfully hosted many events having nothing whatsoever to do with professional football and many more are already scheduled for years to come. While we are immensely proud to be able to call Lucas Oil Stadium our home field, the fact of the matter is the Colts only use the stadium a maximum of nineteen days a year; and the facility is available for use by virtually anyone else the remaining 346 days.

Second, the Colts have been engaged in extensive dialogue, based upon facts and equity, with those leaders who are working hard to find a solution to the CIB funding shortfall. Jim Irsay has personally met with Senator Luke Kenley and Mayor Greg Ballard to discuss these matters. Our representatives have also been in frank, open, and continuing communication with the CIB and the financial leaders of the state legislature since this issue began to emerge early last winter.

Third, our understanding of the CIB’s history is that the CIB’s budget shortfall is neither new nor unexpected. In fact, only a relatively small portion of the predicted shortfall can be directly attributed to the increase in actual maintenance and operations expense required by Lucas Oil Stadium. What is particularly puzzling is that the shortfall appears to have only become a crisis when the CIB concluded it might be obliged to assume all the operating costs of Conseco Fieldhouse to avoid an early termination of the Pacers’ lease.

Fourth, the Colts believe recent criticism of its civic involvement to be unwarranted and unfair. We are extremely proud to have one of professional sports’ most comprehensive community outreach programs. While we are deeply involved statewide, we have not predicated charitable giving and civic involvement upon how much public acclaim the club gets in return. The Colts remain committed to that approach.

Fifth, the Colts’ commitment to the City of Indianapolis and the State of Indiana has also included providing an exemplary football team on and off the field. The club has invested heavily in recruiting players and coaches of which Indianapolis and the State of Indiana can be proud — on game days and all the other days they make positive contributions to our communities. There are no more positive role models than Peyton Manning, Gary Brackett, and Jeff Saturday. We believe the Colts’ record in wins as well as community leadership speaks for itself. In anticipation of this weekend’s NFL Draft, the Colts are preparing to make multi-year and multi-million dollar commitments to the next generation of leaders like those three.

The Colts remain optimistic that a fair and equitable solution will be found that assures the fiscal good health of the CIB, an organization that is very important to the long-term success of Indianapolis and the entire State of Indiana. We hope, though, that the public discussions of the issues will be based upon facts.

Sincerely,

The Indianapolis Colts

  • Nick

    Wow, the Colts didn’t want a new $750+ million stadium and the Pacers never asked for $15 million for operating expenses. I guess the Colts never asked for $20 million in operating expenses either? The wonders never seem to end!

  • Rocker

    I do not think this statement warrants a STFU.

  • Daw-g

    I disagree with Rocker. I vote for the STFU option of the two choices presented.

  • NO new taxes

    I am in favor of a double STFU!!

  • varangianguard

    Way to throw the Pacers under the bus. Still, …
    .
    Until all the freebies coming to the insiders at the CIB, City, and State are put on the auction block, none of them really have any skin in the game either. In effect, they are claiming their skin based upon taxpayer contributions. Not the same thing at all.
    .
    No more suite, no more “free” tickets, parking passes, or catering. Insiders want in on that from now on? Pay for it, like the rest of us do.
    .
    Get the picture?

  • Flipper

    if all the protesters could come together. we could all drive our vehicles around oil can stadium on the colts first home game. grid lock the 4 streets bumper to bumper so no patrons could attend the games. the cops couldnt arrest any of us since were just stuck in a traffic jam.

    the cops did the same thing during the hudnut days when they grid locked their vehicles around the cc building with red lights and sirens on ans threw all the car keys in a barrel.

    lets all come up with a way to protest and also trash the colts first home game.

  • Nick

    Truth be Known

    Everyone needs to remember that taxpayers/CIB did not pay for the operating expenses at the RCA Dome.

    The Colts demanded that CIB take over the ushers, parking attendants, security and medical personnel in addition to relinquishing all revenue from naming rights, advertising, suite income, concessions, parking, non-Colts event income etc..

  • Flipper

    hey melyssa. there are over 400 of us and that would be enough vehicles to screw up the first home game.

  • Local Lawyer

    Indianapolis may be considered a “small market” by NFL standards, but since there is revenue-sharing in the NFL I’m not sure all that small-market talk really means much. You can only jam so many people into a football stadium, regardless of the size of the “market” so I fail to see that market size is all that relevant. I suppose it might make a difference in things like jersey and memorabilia sales, but not ticket revenue or a cut of the total NFL television contact pie.

  • Bart Flies

    This is not the Colts fault. This is the Governor and Kenley’s fault.

    How many times does the Star, Howey and every archive have to say it.

    The Gov. and Kenley knew about this about this AGAINST the protestations of Barty Bart and Fred Glass. Period. Period. Period. Period.

  • Nick

    The Colts seem to have a weak memory about the old and new deals. Perhaps the IBJ and/or IndyStar will do an article to refresh everyones memory.

    Let the start with the IndyStar archive and the article with Bart Peterson and Jim Irsay announcing a new $500 million football stadium. (Ooops, $250 million over budget)

    http://forum.indybluecrew.com/index.php?showtopic=3677&pid=24539&mode=threaded&start=

  • Dave

    Stop Taking From Us?

  • Dave

    BTW, the sign on the east side of the stadium needs maintenance, as the “L” is only partially lit & now reads: I U C A S or not exactly the name of the folks who paid for the naming rights. Or did we citizens do that?

  • Wayne Kirk

    A wonderful piece was written in the mises.org website that I hope each person–including our elected representatives–will take a moment to read.
    .
    The Upside-down World of John Maynard Keynes
    http://mises.org/story/3413

  • http://www.ogdenonpolitics.com Paul K. Ogden

    The Colts have done the impossible. They have made me sympathize with the CIB. I don’t know if we have the best football team in the league, but I know we must have the team that is the most arrogant, ungrateful SOBs in the league.
    .
    I vote for the STFU, and make it a triple.
    .
    By the way, Bart Flies must be writing from Democratic Party headquarters. Either that or he is luped out of his mind.

  • joe

    what a bunch of arrogant hypocrisy. STFU is the only appropriate response. And I know it will never happen, but we gotta find a way to get the colts to come up with more of a contribution — my “fair” figure is $20 million. Otherwise, the cib problems will never go away. (I am assuming the ridiculous bailout will die along the road)

  • patriot paul

    People have been asking for a response from the Colts. Now that we have one is no reason to ask them to shut up. The CIB has a history of incompetence and poor judgment. The Colts originally got into argument with Baltimore because the revenue wasn’t coming in and we were drooling over going big time with the NFL and sacrificed common sense and taxpayer dollars. If we close the stadium, we’d look very foolish as defunct superbowl hosts. We’re stuck. It’s the CIB that’s playing games and manipulating payments. Why haven’t we received their resignations?

  • John Howard

    There’s the $100M lie again.

  • http://bigdawgtales.blogspot.com/ BigDawg65

    I think what they said is accurate. They city and the state wanted this and the CIB is as poorly run now as it has ever been.

  • http://www.ogdenonpolitics.com Paul K. Ogden

    PP, the stadium is not going to “close.” That’s Bob Grand spin. If we are fortunate though maybe the arrogant Colts will take a hike.

  • Think Again

    I am just stunned.

    I pulled up some past statements of Polian, and this is word-for-word his style of speaking/writing.

    If there’s a more arrogant a–hole in pro sports please point him out. And former Commissioner Tagliabue might have a differing opinion, if he could be candid, about the threat to leave. He was the one who brokered the first part of the deal.

    I love to watch the Colts. Huge fan. But honestly, it’ll be more difficult, after this stonewalling piece of shit I’ve read here today. Pardon my French.

    Completely and utterly amazing. And he took about 600 words to tell us to go eff ourselves.

    STFU doesn’t seem adequate.

  • Libra

    Abdul,

    Can we try and go all eminent domain on them, only this time actually seizing the team, property, etc before the Mayflower trucks roll in?

  • http://www.ogdenonpolitics.com Paul K. Ogden

    Think Again,

    I’m with you. I’ve been a big Colts fan. It’s going to be touch cheering for them now. The players are fine, it’s the organization and Jim Irsay who are nothing short of reprehensible. This is arrogance unparalleled.

  • Anon

    “It is also important to note that, from the very beginning, Lucas Oil Stadium was designed to be a multi-use facility to accommodate many users, not just the Colts. Already, the stadium has successfully hosted many events having nothing whatsoever to do with professional football and many more are already scheduled for years to come. While we are immensely proud to be able to call Lucas Oil Stadium our home field, the fact of the matter is the Colts only use the stadium a maximum of nineteen days a year; and the facility is available for use by virtually anyone else the remaining 346 days.”

    This is a great statement that conveniently leaves out the fact that the Colts make money on EVERY SINGLE event held at Lucas Oil. Irsay just sits at home and waits for the checks…

  • Think Again

    I don’t think it’s Jimmy. He’s solid, post-drug-rehab. His community service record, and his insistence on the team’s public face, are strong, also.

    This is all Polian. He’s the Bobby Knight of the NFL. A classic bully. He walks around with a scowl and sooner or later, that attitude becomes the team’s.

    I’ve just about had it with his BS. Off with his head.

  • http://indianateaparty.blogspot.com/2009/04/indianapolis-tea-party-organizer-laura.html Melyssa

    Ir$ay is a Christian! He said so himself!

  • http://www.ogdenonpolitics.com Paul K. Ogden

    Think Again,

    What “community service” has Irsay done? The Colts organization is terrible with community service. The players are great, the management terrible.