Sudbury Five pro basketball team to debut before sold out home crowd - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 06:28 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Sudbury Five pro basketball team to debut before sold out home crowd

Sudbury's professional basketball team is off to a good start on the court and at the box office. The Sudbury Five won their first two games on the road and the home opener is sold out.

Team says it needs an average attendance of 1,500 over 20 home games to break even

The Sudbury Arena has been outfitted with a new floor for the Sudbury Five professional basketball team. (Erik White/CBC)

Sudbury's professional basketball team is off to a good start on the court and at the box office.

The Sudbury Five won their first two National Basketball games on the road last weekend andThursday night's home opener at the Sudbury Arena issold out.

For basketball games, the ends of the arena are blocked off and there is seating at courtside, making for a total of 2,600 seats, down from 5,100 for hockey.

But team account executive Jennifer McGillivraysays tickets have sold so well for the first game that some extra corner seats have been opened up and the Five are expecting to debut in front of a crowd of more than 3,000.

Sudbury Five owner Dario Zulich checked out the new floor for the first time Thursday morning at Sudbury Arena and took a few shots himself. (Erik White/CBC)

She says the target market for basketball is a bit younger than who might come to the arena for junior hockey.

"It's a different game for a different group of people, not that there aren't going to betonnesandtonnesof Wolves fans and we certainly appreciate their support as well," she says.

"Of course most of the revenue comes from ticket sales, advertising sales and community support and sponsorship. And we've been overwhelmed by the support of the community."

McGillivray says the Five needs to bring in an average crowd of 1,500 over the 20 home games to break even this first season.

The average attendance for the league was 2,000 last year, but most of the 10 teams didn't draw those kinds of numbers and some played before just a few hundred fans.