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 Thursday, August 3
Naming rights up for grabs
 
 Associated Press

DENVER -- The naming rights to Mile High Stadium are up for grabs but the winner will not necessarily be the highest bidder.

Stadium officials, who began accepting offers Wednesday, plan to screen the bidders to find out if they would be good corporate neighbors to the community. Each company will be asked 10 questions, including whether the company is based in Colorado and whether it has a large number of employees here.

"We want to find the best partner, and that may not be the company that can write the largest check," said Tim Romani, executive director of the Metropolitan Football Stadium District.

Naming rights are expected to bring in between $52 million and $89 million. District officials said they plan to keep the names of the bidders secret but that the details of any final deal would be released.

The stadium board voted in June to sell the naming rights but they did not close the door on using Mile High as part of the new name.

That option is credited for increasing support for selling the naming rights among Denver area residents.

A poll released Wednesday show residents are nearly evenly divided on the choices for the stadium name.

The poll, conducted for the Denver Rocky Mountain News and KCNC-TV, found that 35 percent are opposed to selling the naming rights but nearly the same favor selling the rights if Mile High would remain part of the name.

The poll, conducted by Talmey-Drake Research and Strategy of Boulder, has a margin of error of 4.9 percentage points so the two positions are very close, said pollster Paul Talmey.

Meanwhile 23 percent favor selling full naming rights.

A poll conducted before the joint naming option was proposed found two-thirds of those responding were against selling the naming rights.

Studies show hyphenating the stadium's name would cut the marketing value in half. But Romani said companies may want to incorporate the name to foster good relations with the public.

"That company could be seen as the white knight who comes in and keeps the name while also reducing the taxpayers' debt," Romani said.

Money raised from the sale of the stadium's name must be used to defray what taxpayers will pay through a sales tax to build the $364 million stadium.
 


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