Will stadium sell beer?
RSL owner still isn't sure if he'll allow alcohol sales at games
Checketts doesn't know now whether he will allow alcohol sales at the 25,000-seat stadium set to open in 2007, but he has said he will look at the question seriously during the next two years.
Usually, selling beer at sporting events nets a team $1 more per game attendee, said Trey Fitz-Gerald, spokesman for Real Salt Lake. With the second-highest average attendance in Major League Soccer, that's big change.
However, Checketts doesn't want to encourage drunken driving.
"I have a problem with the notion that people can get drunk at a game and get behind the wheel and drive home," he said at a news conference Wednesday. "Are we going to sell alcohol at the stadium? I don't have the answer to that today."
It is rare for a professional sports arena not to serve alcohol, but Fitz-Gerald said it is not out of the question.
"If Dave doesn't want to do it, we won't," Fitz-Gerald said. "His vision is for kids to be playing in the shadow of the stadium, to aspire to play for Real Salt Lake. . . . In Dave's gut, there's the potential for that aspect of his vision to be incongruous with serving alcohol and promoting alcohol sales."
"With the fan base that we have, there has not been a challenge in the past with alcohol abuse in our games," Courtemanche said. "It's a family audience, for a large part, Major League Soccer is affordable family entertainment. It's just not something that we've had problems with in the past or believe that we will in the future."
As long as Real Salt Lake plays in Rice-Eccles Stadium at the University of Utah, the games are dry. Rice-Eccles concession stands do not sell beer because it's state property. Neither do concession stands at Utah State University and LDS Church-owned Brigham Young University. But with the pending construction of a soccer stadium in Sandy comes the chance for Real to craft its own alcohol policies.
Checketts, who has a long history of professional sports team involvement, including work with the Utah Jazz, New York Knicks and New York Rangers, could look to other professional league standards about whether to prohibit all sales, cut them off at a certain point during games or allow sales at all times.
Fans at Jazz games in the Delta Center, for example, must get their alcohol before the end of the third quarter, said Mark Stedman, vice president of food services for the center and Franklin Covey Field, where the Stingers play AAA baseball.




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