Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed

Sports


ED GRANEY: 51s' impending name change needs cash-register ring to it

As team nicknames go, the sports world at all levels forever will chase and never catch Yuma High School in Arizona. Having once occupied the buildings that served as a territorial prison, the school adopted with pride the name Criminals and created a mascot whose image is that of a hardened convict. The student merchandise shop is known as the Cell Block. Team uniforms have included prison stripes. It's classic stuff all the way around.

What's in a name?


Most Popular Stories
  • Roach fights off distractions in Pacquiao's camp
  • Pacquiao ready for bigger fight
  • QUIET AND CONFIDENT: Cotto ready to let fists do the talking
  • 20-YEAR REUNION: UNLV celebrates its past
  • Book-signing turnout amazes Agassi
  • Rabbi no novelty act on MGM undercard
  • Rebels ragged in rehearsal
  • LV's native son Andre Agassi opens up in book about tennis, life
  • COLORADO STATE CRUSHED: Rebels easily clear hurdle
  • ED GRANEY: Cotto hopes to cement belief he is best welterweight in world




  • Money. Interest. Things that help all teams flourish, those from minor league baseball included.

    The 51s need a new ballpark more than a fresh marketing campaign, but until the state legislature potentially pursues an important task City Hall mistakenly considers inferior, nickname and logo changes are coming next season.

    It's a good thing, in as much as a team from such an entertainment-based city being named for a once-secret military base and having an alien as its primary insignia grew a bit stale over eight years.

    But what to call the team now owned by the Stevens Baseball Group? It's no simple chore. Players who make up minor league rosters are temporary, but the right nickname and logo can mean financial gains for years. You would be shocked how well the Lansing Lugnuts and Montgomery Biscuits have done at the cash register.

    "The (51s) wasn't that catchy," said team president Don Logan. "We didn't do any sort of branding campaign with it. We just said, 'Here we are. We're the 51s. Let's go get 'em.' There's a lot more to it than that.

    "Whatever we go to (next season), we'll make a concerted effort on a multi-media front to launch the name and logo. If you do it right and it's something people embrace and gravitate towards, then you're going to have a winner."

    Let's consider a few options being thrown around Cashman Field before Saturday night's game against Portland:

    • The Relics: This doesn't have any long-term potential but would definitely fit today, given when you combine the roster of this year's group with those of my daughter's 8-and-under softball team, Las Vegas would still field an average-aged player of, oh, 43.

    • The Rebels: The suggestion came from a guy named Saul who was wearing a UNLV hat and strolling the concourse. He seemed like a nice enough fellow, but he had obviously thrown back five too many before the first pitch. Marketing and promotion are the lifeblood of any team, and just the mere whisper of Rebels in this town brings negative images about both areas.

    • The Stars: It's apparently getting a lot of support, but I look at it as more been-there, done-that. The only other nickname in Las Vegas team history, it conjured blissful memories of the old Pacific Coast League and yet also introduced local baseball fans to the hideous history of Padres uniforms. I say a new identity is better than a used one.

    • The Desert Dodgers: Another popular option with a potentially big problem. Las Vegas is in its final year of its affiliation with Los Angeles, and the Dodgers have been quite clear on their feelings about Cashman: They hate it like they do the Giants.

    "A new facility is the key and what would really get people excited," Logan said. "But we're not counting on (Mayor Oscar Goodman) because we can't count on him. If a stadium deal was going to happen with Oscar, it would already have been done."

    Of course, but why would Goodman and his cohorts be interested in a project that would create jobs and additional tax revenue? Reno, by the way, will have done both with its new state-of-the-art ballpark in 2009.

    Which makes it official: They not only have better college football coaches up there, but also smarter politicians.

    • The Aces: Lots of people like this one, including 51s play-by-play voice Russ Langer and Mickey and Patricia Rigney, fans from Northwest Las Vegas. "It would have something to do with Las Vegas, help bring local fans in, and you could do a lot of fun stuff with the logo as different playing cards," said Mickey, who I'm unofficially nominating for the apparently vacant position of marketing director for UNLV athletics.

    • The Gladiators: I'm not serious about this one, but when things get slow and boring around here, don't you for a second miss that buffoon Jim Ferraro?

    "I want to hear what our fans think," Logan said. "I want it to be a campaign where they help decide how we go on this. This is something that could take on a life of its own and go forward for five, 10, 20 years."

    Yuma High became the Criminals in 1917.

    Tough act for anyone to match.

    Ed Graney's column is published Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. He can be reached at 383-4618 or egraney@reviewjournal.com.

    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 18 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    Report abuse

    Stacy wrote on August 16, 2008 11:09 PM: If they are going to build a staduim they should starting right now! There's a lot of desert lot's in the Las Vegas Valley. I think that Logan would decide to build the new statdum in ethere Henderson or North Las Vegas,but that's up to Henderson's Mayor Or North's Las Vegas' Mayor.


    Report abuse

    Manchie Light wrote on June 09, 2008 08:52 AM: Las Vegas Knights


    Report abuse

    kevin wrote on April 28, 2008 12:32 PM: Since when did the Padres ever have an ugly uniform? The brown and yellow jerseys are one of the most popular retro jerseys that people buy. Stars was a classy name for a classy organization.


    Report abuse

    Bubba Smith wrote on April 27, 2008 03:03 PM: How about "Mafia"? singular term

    Ya know, the Vegas Mafia.

    hey, it's got potential. and if you don't like it, step into this alley and let's discuss.


    Report abuse

    JD wrote on April 27, 2008 03:02 PM: Oh Ed, how could you have forgotten about calling the 51's the COUGARS, in regards to your favorite team from BYU. Can't even believe you mentioned the REBELS as an option, you know you can't write anything about UNLV without refering to how great you think BYU is. You can do better!


    Report abuse

    Nick wrote on April 27, 2008 02:05 PM: MLB - You've got a point, but at the same time, Las Vegas has about the same population as many "major league" AAA cities, including Portland, Sacramento, Memphis, New Orleans, Indianapolis, Columbus, Nashville, Buffalo and Charlotte.

    MLB is not coming to Las Vegas unless it has an "interim" stadium for a team to play in. That stadium can't be Cashman Field. A new AAA ballpark can be built in a way that 30,000 seats and a roof can be added to it. (Cashman, by the way, was supposed to be built that way but for some reason nobody mentions that.)


    Report abuse

    We want MLB wrote on April 27, 2008 02:01 PM: No taxpayer is going to pay for a minor league stadium. Minor league baseball is LAME and an embarrassment for Las Vegas. Please take your team and leave town. Go some place that will appreciate you. There are many small cities that are dying for anything new and will build you a new stadium. Can you believe we are in the same league as Reno when it comes to sports? 2 million people in Vegas and no sports worth seeing except Rebel basketball. How about Las Vegas Losers? Only a loser would go to a PCL game.


    Report abuse

    DWIF wrote on April 27, 2008 11:34 AM: I also like the Las Vegas Gamblers.


    Report abuse

    Nick wrote on April 27, 2008 11:00 AM: By the way, when was the last time anyone thought of the PCL and an "ace"? The league is notorious for high-scoring games. It could too easily become a joke.


    Report abuse

    Nick wrote on April 27, 2008 10:53 AM: Those adopted names happened 50 years ago (except the Marlins, although that FSL team was defunct 50 years ago). There was a concerted effort among pro teams to shed minor-league associations — one of the reasons Russ Langer was not the broadcaster for the Diamondbacks after being the voice of the Firebirds for a decade.

    Logan worked for a bunch of chuckleheads from Mandalay Sports (not affiliated with Mandalay Casinos), some movie guys who bought a couple sports teams and turned them into cartoon caricatures of themselves (Dayton Dragons, Frisco RoughRiders, Hagerstown Suns, Erie SeaWolves). They didn't know squat about marketing, and their successes elsewhere were because they were the only game in town (what else is there to do on a summer night in Dayton?)

    Donnie can't close the deal on a ballpark on his own. Nobody wants to tango and nobody's shelling out 40 million to build him a ballpark. His best hope is to get a special improvement district somewhere — a $40 million loan from the city or county to build the stadium. That's paid down as sales and property tax revenue from around the stadium is diverted to pay off the debt, the theory being that if you build a ballpark district that didn't exist before you built a ballpark, that sales tax revenue wouldn't have existed anyway... making something out of nothing, so to speak.

    Meanwhile, Cashman sits. They can do nothing to the park because the LVCVA owns it and whatever improvements they get is considered a gift. If the LVCVA would replace the bleachers with seats, put some innovative shade structure over the stands, take out a row or two for a wider concourse and put some shops and condos in the parking lot, everyone would shut up. But why should they?


    Read All Comments