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If You Can't Be An Athlete: Sports & the Economy
October 29, 2003 @ 6:33 am and 8:20 am on 90.3
The Dayton
Synchronettes won their 13th overall national title last weekend
at the U.S. Masters Synchronized Swimming Championship in Cleveland.
That left the home team, the Brecksville Blue Dolphins, trailing
far behind after teams from California, D.C. and Michigan. But Northeast
Ohio can still hold its head high. The Masters Championship brought
about 500 people to Cleveland who spent roughly $175,000. As part
of Making Change: Reinventing Our Economy,
ideastream’s Shula Neuman dives into the economic value of
amateur athletic events like the one that made a splash this past
weekend.

U.S.
Masters Synchronized Swimming Championship - Photos
View
a gallery of photos from the event taken by Shula Neuman.
Announcer:
Swimmer number nine from the Brecksville Blue Dolphins, Kim Colten...
In
her sparkling swimsuit, hair securely gelled into to a bun and nose
clip firmly clamped on her nose, the competitor assumes a statue-like
pose. Then the music starts.
And Kim dives
into the pool, emerging feet first and performing a series of turns,
kicks and splits before coming up for air. So it went last weekend
at Cleveland State University for about 260 competitors in the U.S.
Master’s Synchronized Swimming Championship - or synchro
to those in the know. Now, you may be wondering: Cleveland and Synchro?
What’s the connection?
Pat
Craft: For us it was really the willingness to help.
They understood they don’t know much about synchro, which
is normal.
Pat Craft is business development manager for U.S. Synchronized Swimming,
the governing body for the sport. He says ignorance didn’t stop
the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission from accommodating the group’s
every need.
Pat
Craft: We feel we’re an important
event. And we want to be important; we don’t want to be second
best to anyone. I don’t care if you bring the Superbowl, we
want to be in their eyes as important and that’s how they
treat us. That’s how it’s been here. Like I said, Cleveland
has - they’re really on the radar screen for a lot of the
national governing bodies.
There’s
been wrestling and diving championships, equestrian pony finals,
judo and wheelchair games. With five years under its belt, the Sports
Commission is responsible for raising the profile of Northeast Ohio
as the place to hold major amateur sporting events. David Gilbert,
president and CEO of the Sports Commission, says it’s the
smaller events that make or break a city’s reputation. Take
the synchro competition, for example.
David
Gilbert: We’ve never hosted a national synchronized
swim event in Cleveland. So, you do well with this and there’s
opportunity for others. Quite frankly, in the Olympic movement,
you do well with any and the word spreads and it helps you get other
events.
Of
course, the big events boost the city’s status, too. The U.S.
Gymnastics Championships in 2002 was a biggie, so are the Gravity
Games. The International Children’s Games are coming up next
year and the NCAA Women’s Final Four in 2007. Gilbert says each
successful event lures another, which in turn attracts money to the
region. Gilbert brags that in all, the commission has a $165,000,000
economic impact - that’s including all 45 events the commission
has lined up through 2007.
David
Gilbert: If you get one or two major
events a year, an event that fills an arena, an event that has national
television exposure, I think you’re doing very well. But also
need another six, eight ten events that are small or medium that
the biggest benefit may be that they fill hotel rooms.
The synchro championship filled about 500 hotel rooms for four nights
last week.
Mark
Rosentraub: In the realm of things, you say, “well,
what’s 500 people.” Very small.
Mark Rosentraub, dean of the school of urban affairs at Cleveland
State University.
Mark
Rosentraub: But if you have these
kinds of things happening on a regularized basis it becomes an important
part of the cash flow of the city of Cleveland.
Rosentraub
says considering the paltry condition of the city’s finances,
those 500-person events on a regular basis could have a significant
impact on the city’s well-being as well as the region’s.
Mark
Rosentraub: When
Cleveland hosts the high school wrestling championships, this is
very important for the region because we bring a lot of people in
from the state of Ohio. It’s very important for the city of
Cleveland, because a lot of people stay downtown. That generates
money for the city that has to be very focused on the amount of
revenue that it produces.
What’s
more, amateur sports have a greater benefit to our economy than
our professional sports teams, Rosentraub says. The Browns and Indians
entertain the locals, mostly, which brings money from the suburbs
to the city. But amateur sports draw outsiders, and those visitors
spend their money checking out Cleveland. In other words, the $175,000
the synchro championship generated was new money from places
outside of Northeast Ohio. According to U.S. Synchro’s Pat
Clark, the swimmers found a lot of opportunities to spend in Cleveland.
Pat
Clark: And everyone was commenting on the theatre. I
was not aware about Les Mis and all those shows that
are in town. The big thing here is the restaurants, everyone loves
to eat and so the wide array of restaurants has really been cool.
That’s a nice plus here.
So, while these
events allow visiting athletes to sample Cleveland’s gastronomical
selection, they also give the locals a chance to broaden their athletic
palate. There’s a weight-lifting championship coming up in
November. And next year you can check out speed skating, jump rope
and platform tennis championships-just to name a few. In Cleveland,
Shula Neuman, 90.3.

Resources:
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U.S. Synchronized Swimming
The official site for U.S. Synchronized Swimming features information
about synchro as well as the organization.
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