'Hoping and praying': Tampa eyes Super Bowl windfall despite COVID-19
crunch
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[February 04, 2021]
By Amy Tennery and Gabriella Borter
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - This Sunday's
Super Bowl in Tampa will hardly rake in as much revenue as in past
years but it is a welcome salve for Florida's third-largest city,
with local businesses grateful for any windfall during a pandemic.
Last year’s Super Bowl, 280 miles (451 km) down the road in Miami,
brought that city $572 million in new spending, according to Miami's
Super Bowl Host Committee. This year's figure is expected to be far
lower due to COVID-19, with limited attendance at the game, canceled
corporate events and curtailed spending.
"Lots of sponsors have canceled their events, lots of corporate
sponsorships are not here. There have been NFL-affiliated events
that have been canceled and non-NFL-affiliated events that have
canceled," said Visit Tampa Bay CEO Santiago Corrada.
"We will see economic impact, the question is how much, based on all
the things that are missing for us.”
Since March, tourism industry sectors in Tampa have had to lay off
50%-75% of their staff and have begun to re-employ people only
gradually, Corrada said. But the activities surrounding the National
Football League's showcase game - which this year features the
hometown Tampa Bay Buccaneers against the Kansas City Chiefs - may
create some jobs, particularly in hotels that receive an influx of
guests, he said.
Hotel occupancy in Tampa was at 53.3% as of Jan. 23, compared with a
typical rate of 73.4% at this time of year. That is a far cry from
the hotel occupancy low of 22.3%, which the city hit in April, and
it is likely to go up as visiting fans and the Chiefs take over
hotels close to the stadium.
"There’s so much hope for 2021,” he said, noting that the Buccaneers
playing the first Super Bowl home game after acquiring star players
like six-time NFL champion Tom Brady gives the city "a Cinderella
story" that could likely generate tourism dollars.
"Anytime Tampa, Tampa Bay is mentioned is free marketing and free
advertising, and we’ve gotten it in spades since Sunday. I can only
imagine what a Super Bowl win does for us."
Tampa’s last hosting gig in 2009 came with its own headaches amid
the recession, with a PriceWaterhouseCoopers report at the time
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-nfl-superbowl-economy-idCATRE50M47K20090123?edition-redirect=uk
estimating direct spending would be about $150 million - $50 million
less than the previous two Super Bowls in Phoenix and Miami.
And with the 65,890-capacity Raymond James Stadium opening its gates
for just 22,000 fans in general admission and 2,700 in suites, local
officials said the reduction in economic activity this time around
will be an undeniable reality for the city's fifth stint as a Super
Bowl host.
"It'll be less than what a normal Super Bowl has been and we're
seeing there isn't as much activity as normal," said Bob Rohrlack,
the president and CEO of the Tampa Bay Chamber.
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Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide
receiver Mike Evans during NFL football practice, Wednesday, Feb. 3,
2021 in Tampa, Fla. The Buccaneers will face the Kansas City Chiefs
in Super Bowl 55. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Zedaker/Handout Photo via
USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
But Rohrlack, who said the COVID-19 pandemic hit the local
hospitality industry like a "lightning strike," added that the
curtailed spending around this year's Super Bowl was an opportunity
to look "at that glass half-full."
"Probably every other host, every other city with an NFL team, would
like to have a Super Bowl coming in to get any positive economic
impact we can get," said Rohrlack.
'PEOPLE ARE SKITTISH'
Chuck Calhoun, the general manager for Pete's Place North and Pete's
Place South bars, both in Tampa, said he and his staff were "hoping
and praying" that the game - and the days leading up to it - will
help bring back the momentum lost to the pandemic.
"Before COVID hit, we were a steam ship – there was coal in the oven
and we were burning so hard," said Calhoun, who estimated that they
were closed for five months in 2020 and said on Wednesday that he
had not seen much of a jump in business yet, particularly in the
"South" location, which is entirely indoors.
"People are skittish about coming out to the indoor locations right
now," said Calhoun, noting that some patrons were weary of dealing
with mask regulations.
"We have the same rules as everybody has," he said. "When you get
up, you need to have (a mask) on."
Those rules have grown only more stringent with the game coming to
town, with masks now also required in outdoor environments where
social distancing is not possible, as the COVID-19 pandemic has
claimed more than 440,000 lives across the United States.
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said Tampa Police and code enforcement are
in place to keep fans in line with COVID-19 safety rules.
"We intend to put on the best Super Bowl ever, even if it's under
some unusual and difficult circumstances," said Castor.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in Tampa, Fla., and Gabriella Borter in
New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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