Archive for June 26th, 2008
Why Nashville is lucky the Preds aren’t the Supersonics
If not for Jim Balsillie’s serious misstep last summer, the scene unfolding in Seattle this week might well be happening here in Nashville. The SuperSonics, who have called the Emerald City home for the past 41 years, are attempting to exit their lease to relocate to Oklahoma City in time for the 2008-09 NBA season. Quite understandably, Oklahomans are paying attention as their hopes of securing the state’s first major-league franchise are close to being realized.
A nasty, ugly conflict between the city of Seattle and the team’s current owners has landed in court, and U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman is preparing to issue a verdict. Pechman’s duty will be to decide whether the Sonics must honor the remaining two years of their lease at Key Arena or whether the team can buy its way out and proceed to the Sooner state.
This almost assuredly would have been the endgame for Balsillie and the city of Nashville, whether right now or within a few years, had the Blackberry co-founder not made the egregious error of promoting season tickets in Ontario while proclaiming his willingness to give the Preds a fighting chance in Tennessee. If Balsillie hadn’t committed such a blunder, the ink might have long been dry on the team’s sale agreement before Nashvillians ever experienced the first concrete indication of his real intentions: to move the franchise north of the border.
I have somewhat mixed feelings about the Sonics’ fate. As a Preds fan with fresh wounds from last summer’s crisis, I would hate to see the team leave Seattle. Back in the 80s and early 90s when I still enjoyed NBA basketball, the Sonics were a team I liked to follow. Despite managing only 20 wins this past season, the team has a rich history in Seattle that should be preserved.
On the other hand, I still recall checking the news constantly in 1995 to learn the latest about the New Jersey Devils’ possible relocation to Nashville. I had nothing in particular against the Garden State, but I very much wanted major-league sports to land in Nashville, particularly the NHL or the NFL. (Who’d have thought then that both leagues would arrive so soon?) If not for a Cinderella run to the Stanley Cup that season, Nashville would undoubtedly be home to the Devils, not the Preds.
I say all of this to mean that I can’t fault Oklahomans for longing for the Sonics to come to town any more than I can Washingtonians for wanting to keep them out west. At this point, I’m just happy that this blog post is focused a few thousand miles west of here, not in a Davidson County courtroom. Long live the Nashville Predators.
Where is Bobblehead George?
If you’re asking that question, local blogger, twitterer and fellow PR pro Jim Reams may have the answer. Inspired by Tuesday’s popular George Plaster bobblehead giveaway by the Nashville Sounds, Jim is now tracking the movements of “Bobblehead George” around the city (and presuming this gains some momentum, around the globe).
So far George has managed to visit Second Avenue and Sportsman’s Grille in Hillsboro Village. How long will it take George to discover Brightkite?
Do you have a photo of George the bobblehead to share? Send it to wheresbobbleheadgeorge@yahoo.com.
Things I learned at today’s Nashville Geek Breakfast
Today’s Nashville Geek Breakfast was a lot of fun, as usual. Here are a few things I learned.
- Special guest Aaron from Iowa is in town for work and decided to check out how we roll in Music City. Aaron participates in a local Twitter group in Des Moines. We all agreed that Tennessee is a better (and drier) place to be than Iowa at the moment, but Aaron reported that conditions there are improving. I hope things continue to get better.
- With the addition of Digital Nashville to our hodgepodge of local tech communities, I have set a personal goal to see the ratio of tech groups to local geeks reach 1:1. I think this is achievable.
- Kelly Stewart volunteers to help create the Cumberland Trail, which will be 300 miles long from Chattanooga to northeast Tennessee when finished. First proposed in the 1960s, the idea is inspired by the Appalachian Trail. About 160 miles of trail (not all of them are consecutive) have been established so far.
- Mitch Canter has a really sweet RSS T-shirt featuring the familiar orange logo that says “Feed Me” on it. Nice!
- Professional Nerd Herder Cal Evans recently launched a local PHP developers Twitter listing (Note: link corrected from the original post) that is growing by leaps and bounds. Way to go, Cal!
- Geek ringleader Dave Delaney has created a video to commemorate his 8,000 Twitter tweet. It should be noted that only 50 percent of Dave’s tweets are reconstituted blog posts. (Just kidding, Dave.) Congrats on this milestone!
- Jackson Miller and Digital Nashville co-founder Elin Elfler are real, live people, not just digital avatars. I say that because Jackson and I cross paths primarily via the Web, and I saw Elin in person today for the first time. Howdy, y’all!
If you haven’t made it to a Nashville Geek Breakfast yet, you’re definitely missing out. Hope to see you next time.



