10 -> 2022 - Weeks 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 17
Felt like Watson missed more than 3 games but he was probably limited or left early in a few. Doubs missed weeks 10 - 13.
Do you need a subscription to Amazon Prime to watch the Packers-Lions?
Probably yes, though not if you live in the Green Bay or Milwaukee markets. If you live in Milwaukee, the game will also air on WITI (Fox 6). In northeast Wisconsin, it'll be on WGBA (NBC 26). Everyone else will need a subscription to Amazon Prime to stream the game (unless they're in Detroit, where it's also airing on a traditional linear channel).
Oh ok. I don't remember that. I seem to recall the city balking at their portion of the Miller Park funding going towards a proposed taproom of some kind that would have been just east of the stadium but I don't remember Poto discussions.
Komatsu's old plant is right next to the valley (they moved to the Harbor District). There is a ton of room to just create a neighborhood from scratch if they want. But yes they'd need to redo that infrastructure and add some transit in there to make it appealing.
This was a fantastic win. The Packers were arguably missing 5 of their top 6 players (Gary being the other one). Some dumb mistakes but it's a really young team. I think they could be very good once they are fully healthy. Hopefully that actually happens at some point this season.
That's the rub - the Brewers are gaining more from parking lots than development. The city would gain more from development than parking lots. I think the Brewers would probably like to develop some of that land but they want the same tax deal they have now.
The vacancy rate for apartments in Milwaukee is 6.6%. Plenty of people would live there. Some mid rise apartments, townhomes along the river, add a hotel, a brewery, office space, etc. What was once a sea of parking is now a lot of buildings. And there's a bunch of retail a mile south of there - it's not as isolated as it looks.
Titletown has one bar. I don't think a "Beer District" would have to have a ton in the way of entertainment or bars or restaurants, They could have a mix of residential and commercial. Hank Aaron trail and the river run right through the property which might be attractive to people.
Nashville is spending 1.2 billion dollars in public funds on a new football stadium. I suppose it could be retrofitted for baseball but that would probably not be ideal for a team moving in. So then you're looking at another funding deal to build a new baseball stadium.... would the city pony up?
I think building parking structures largely addresses that issue. You probably have the same amount of parking spots they just take up less land. I think the fact that people can drive two hours and are guaranteed a game rain or shine is what helps attendance the most.
It's probably not his call. The Brewers must think they can make more money off of parking (and not paying property taxes on those lots) than they can via development.