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Just curious, I guess. Can anybody figure out what these twenty cities have in common?
Hint: only these twenty share these traits.
Albuquerque, NM
(+17.6)Aurora, CO
(+17.4)Austin, TX
(+17.7)Bakersfield, CA
(+33.2)Colorado Springs, CO
(+10.7)El Paso, TX
(+10.0)Fort Worth, TX
(+33.9)Fresno, CA
(+11.7)Honolulu, HI
(+0.8)Las Vegas, NV
(+18.2)Long Beach, CA
(+0.2)Louisville, KY
(+2.3)Mesa, AZ
(+16.2)Omaha, NE
(+11.3)Santa Ana, CA
(+0.7)Toledo, OH *
(+0.8)Tulsa, OK
(-0.9)Tuscon, AZ
(+12.6)Virginia Beach, VA
(+2.0)Wichita, KN
(+5.7)*-
another hint: that one really stings.
ANSWER: The 20 cities listed above are
A) among the 60 cities in the US with a larger population than Pittsburgh and
B) have managed to achieve this without a
single major league sports team to their credit. Not a one. You'll recall how often we've been warned that if we lose any one out of our three (3!) major league franchises, we'd become a "minor league" city and wither away.
(If you post comments with links to any specific such jeremiads I'll highlight them). So I find the ability of these cities to attract, retain and employ residents on such a large scale remarkable.
Just to provide a little more context, population trends over the last decade have been added parenthetically. Pittsburgh has
lost 6.8% of its population since 2000 -- by which time the economy had already transformed enough that many of us feared the Y2K bug. We were worried about failing power grids and financial systems but not mills and factories as I recall.
What does it all mean? In thirty years, when we are faced again with replacing one of our stadiums ... if you like cheering for the home team and wish to continue doing so, fine. If you want to argue that we can't be a "major league city" or an economic success without a _______ team, maybe someone will still have this post bookmarked and ready to go. Or maybe by then all the drilling will have left us looking like something out of the last few pages of The Lorax. Somebody could scrawl "UNLESS" across the scoreboard at Heinz Field.
______________
(Yes, upon further review, Fort Worth is frequently considered part of the "Dallas / Ft. Worth / Arlington" metropolitan area. Yet all of its sports franchises are hosted elsewhere in that triangle, and more importantly Dallas is the only one with name privileges, which I think is relevant if we're discussing the notoriety and mystique of being a Big League Town and all that which it brings. Besides, Washington, PA is as far away from Pittsburgh as is Ft. Worth from Dallas.)