Did you hear? Santa Clara discovered $240 million {dollars} of their checking account! Wait, no. Santa Clara was given $240 million {dollars} by the NFL! No, that isn’t proper both. Okay, I acquired it this time. In 2016, the San Francisco 49ers launched a press release claiming that the town of Santa Clara and San Francisco (SC/SF) noticed a “net positive economic impact … of at least $240 million”.
This got here from a so-called “independent study” and the 49ers milked it up by releasing PR piece after PR piece the place all types of individuals known as the Tremendous Bowl a “smart investment” and an funding that “paid off handsomely”.
This report emphasised that everybody received.
“After a lot political finger-pointing about why San Francisco taxpayers have been footing the payments for Tremendous Bowl 50-related companies when Santa Clara’s weren’t, it seems that San Francisco made cash, accommodations made cash, outlets and eating places made cash and — you could be positive — the Nationwide Soccer League made cash” – BizJournal, 08/19/16
Solely drawback? It’s full bullshit. The NFL has been lying about the actual economic impact on cities over a few years and counting. The third-party analysis agency, SportsImpacts, has been called out before when issuing stories with insane numbers. The staff pays an organization like SportsImpacts to jot down a monetary report that helps their trigger. Los Angeles wanted some good PR earlier than they hosted the 2022 Tremendous Bowl, so they called SportsImpacts. This allowed for a report back to be written up exhibiting simply what number of tens of millions the realm will generate from the Tremendous Bowl.
Moreover this quantity given to us by SportsImpacts, there isn’t a single piece of proof exhibiting that anybody benefitted to the diploma of $240 million. Native metropolis budgets for Santa Clara and surrounding areas show no difference at all. In reality, San Jose admitted after the 2016 Tremendous Bowl that they anticipated tens of millions yet got just enough to pay for the prices of internet hosting the occasions required exterior the sport.

In reality, this occurs virtually yearly. The NFL needs cities to be working over each other to host it. That approach, they proceed to be given a black field of cash that by no means runs out. The NFL has continued to cover what it requires cities to pay for despite the fact that they’re asking for taxpayer cash. How on earth can that be saved secret? The one time it managed to come back out was in 2014 when somebody on Minnesota’s committee leaked a few of the NFL necessities for a metropolis/state.
“With the intention to ship a Tremendous Bowl, the NFL needs free luxurious resort rooms, police escorts and tax exemption from the host metropolis. A leaked report reveals the league’s 153 pages of requests for the 2018 Tremendous Bowl in Minneapolis” – SBNation, 06/08/14
But, even with these large calls for, one would assume that the Tremendous Bowl would financially be a house run. Properly? When the New York Times looked into the claim that the 2012 Tremendous Bowl in Indianapolis was some kind of financial large, they as an alternative discovered that the true numbers have been barely 1/4th of what was beforehand reported. Or let’s take a look at Glendale, Arizona, the place it was reported that the economic impact of the 2015 Super Bowl was over $500 million {dollars}! Native cities should have missed that cash, as the prices of the sport and its different occasions value Phoenix taxpayers around $2 million.
Why are cities not making extra money off this massive occasion? As a result of they’re paying tens of millions upon tens of millions in bills mandated by the NFL. Bloomberg wrote a superb story after the 2016 Tremendous Bowl, by which they famous how native taxpayers paid the bill for internet hosting the Tremendous Bowl and its many off-field festivities. The NFL, a multi-billion greenback firm, pays nothing, let me repeat that, nothing throughout Tremendous Bowl weeks because of a deal between the city and the NFL Host Committee. For those who have been questioning, local taxpayers did pay for the development of the stadium in Santa Clara. As Bloomberg discovered in their story about the 2016 Super Bowl, there’s a vast amount of evidence that suggests that the Tremendous Bowl advantages are overstated and not worth the cost of hosting.

Quick-forward to this 12 months. Guess who might be internet hosting the Tremendous Bowl in 2026? Santa Clara, dwelling of the San Francisco 49ers. Guess what we’re beginning to hear?
“The San Francisco Journey Affiliation stated Tremendous Bowl 50 introduced a further $240 million into the native financial system” – NBC Bay Area, 05/18/23
Heck, some are even including to the make-believe numbers supporting internet hosting the Tremendous Bowl.
“Tremendous Bowl 50 generated $250 million in financial affect for the area, creating 1000’s of jobs for native residents. Tremendous Bowl 60 is an opportunity to construct on that success and might be a boon for the Bay Space” – SVVoice, 05/25/23

Fortunately, many within the media are catching on. After Santa Clara was awarded the Tremendous Bowl for 2026, the San Francisco Chronicle ran a narrative famous of how overinflated the financial guarantees are by NFL boosters.
“Once we take a look at knowledge for cities that hosted the Tremendous Bowl, they normally get a rise in financial exercise of $50 million to $150 million … That’s not nothing, however a fraction of the $400 million to $600 million quantity thrown round by the boosters” – San Francisco,05/20/23, Victor Matheson, Sports activities Economist at Holy Cross and co-author of “The Economics of the Super Bowl: Players, Performers, and Cities.”
Let’s simply hope that Santa Clara continues the lengthy held custom of attempting to cover or swat away any homeless who attempt to enterprise over in the direction of the sport or one among its many events. Dallas, Detroit, Jacksonville, Glendale, and New Orleans are cities that have in the past attempted to keep the homeless away from the stadiums.
