You forgot to answer my question McG: were you a Seattle Supersonics fan?  Given how worried you seemed to be earlier in the thread about the supposed bias I was bringing to this issue, one would think you would be anxious to explain where you are coming from.
McG wrote:captain_cheapseats wrote:The NBA has already granted the new OKC franchise an exclusive DMA for all geographic areas within a 75 mile radius of the city. OKC will also have DMA territories that it shares with one or two other midwestern teams (the exact borders of these are sadly not public information at this time). 
Do Kansas, Arkansas, Nebraska and Missouri fall within this 
magical 75-mile radius? (Thanks in advance for disproving your point!)
 
Two things.....
(1): Nice try at changing the topic.  You wrote "You seem to be under the belief as soon as a professional sports team enters a market it creates some sort of magical radius around it that enthralls every fan until reaching the next franchise's radius. Do you really believe this or are you simply arguing for the sake of arguing?"  I responded by explaining the concept of DMA (or, in your words, "magic circles"), and how they effect sports marketing.  We can debate how large the OKC DMA will be (see point 2), but let's not pretend for even a second that your "magic circle" statement was anything but foolish.
(2): You appear to be entirely ignoring the second sentance, namely "OKC will also have DMA territories that it shares with one or two other midwestern teams (the exact borders of these are sadly not public information at this time)."  My suspician is that OKC will ultimately be awarded an exclusive DMA for all of Kansas, along with large chunks of the other states listed, as well as extensive shared DMAs with the Mavs, Griz and Nuggets.  But again, that info is not available to the public, if it is even known at all.
McG wrote:captain_cheapseats wrote:point was that Boston is a larger sports market than Houston, despite having a smaller MSA.
You fail to mention your primary point in comparing the two cities: the interest level/fanbase of Boston/OKC sport(s) will stretch outward to fans within hundreds of miles. Thus, you are in fact comparing the impact that sport(s) in each respective area will have in their not-so-immediate proximities. I chose to analyze how the city with arguably the richest sports history is a terrible comparison to OKC, but I'm glad you chose to disregard this.
 
Lol, you really just don't grasp the concept of "analogy" do you?  My first post said that OKC will not be "a huge market team by any stretch of the imagination, but it does put you well above the Milwaukee's of the world[,]" for the same reason that Boston is a larger market than Houston (despite having a smaller metro area).  No reasonable person could possibly turn that into a Boston vs. OKC comparison.  Oh, and as for the "I'm glad you chose to disregard this" comment, you're kidding, right?  We've debated your erroneous rich history argument ad naseum already, and continue to do so in the very next paragraph. 
  McG wrote:captain_cheapseats wrote:You actually wrote in your last post that people in Maine root for the Boston teams because of their proud tradition, rather than geographic proximity. It's awfully hard for me to "grasp" your points when they reach that level of absurdity.
My point was that there is a lot more than just 'closest team proximity'/
magical radius involved in how fans choose teams. I'm not sure why you fail to concede this very simple fact.
 
Nice attempt to retreat to a less extreme position.  You've denied throughout this thread that geographic proximity to other teams plays any role in determining fanbase size, have lost the point, are now trying to recast our debate as me saying that 
only geographic proximity matters.  Obviously geographic proximity is not the only thing that determines fanbase size, you'd have to be a moron to think that.  It is, however, a very important element, and I would argue the most important element.
McG wrote:The Red Sox regularly have home field advantage AWAY from home. If they can draw 20,000 fans playing on the West Coast, it shouldn't be surprising that they can dominate any market within a few hundred miles. This, in case you are still confused, can most closely be defined as history.
You still don't get it, the Red Sox don't dominate the New England market, they 
are the New England market, thanks to their exclusive DMA rights.  Below is a link to a map of the MLB DMAs for each franchise.  You'll notice that the Sox are the only team permitted to market itself in MA, ME, NH, VT and RI.  
http://www.maurybrown.com/images/MLBTerritories.jpg