The Arena that San Diego Is Planning Is Too Small For an NBA or NHL Franchise

By Evan Weiner / Sports Talk Florida / November 19, 2025

The San Diego Planning Commission has recommended that the San Diego City Council give its approval to the Midway Rising project that could eventually become an arena-village.

San Diego needs an arena to have a chance to land either a National Hockey League or National Basketball Association franchise.

Different investors in Alpharetta, Georgia are planning to build arenas and are pushing to get an NHL expansion franchise. The NBA may expand by two franchises in the future and there might be an opportunity to land a financially struggling franchise with an expiring arena lease agreement around 2030. Las Vegas and Seattle more than likely will get the two expansion slots if  the league gets around to expanding.

San Diego has a 59-year-old arena that local elected officials and business leaders think needs to be replaced. A 7,500-seat arena opened in nearby Oceanside in 2024.

National Football League, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League and Major League Soccer owner Stan Kroenke got involved with the redevelopment of the 48.5-acre San Diego Sports Arena site.

There was a thought that with Kroenke being involved in building a new arena that there was a possibility that he could get an NBA or NHL team to come to San Diego through either relocation or expansion.

The planned new arena in San Diego will seat only 16,000 people for an NBA game and probably about 1,500 people less for an NHL game and that is not going to cut it with either league.

The Midway Rising group wants national events, such as the NCAA regional basketball or hockey tournaments, combat sports such as the UFC, or Professional Fighters League, and the Academy of Country Music Awards. It appears Midway Rising is not looking for either an NBA or NHL franchise.  But that could change if the building adds seats.

 

Author: Source

7 thoughts on “The Arena that San Diego Is Planning Is Too Small For an NBA or NHL Franchise

  1. Hmmm. $200 for a seat in the rafters. $12 for a beer. Bumper to bumper traffic jam for hours. 1000 other things you can do in America’s best climate for free outdoors. Not enough billionaires, celebrities, and major corporations to support indoor pro sports here. The NBA- who cares? Make it smaller. In fact, cut the whole development in half.

    1. Alot of people have a hard enough time paying for rent and groceries,auto insurance,and health insurance.On top of that $20 dollar parking.I would not be going to a sports event,and dropping another $15 bucks for a hot dog.My life long buddies that have been going to Padre games for 50 years no longer go because they can’t afford it.Sports events are out of control.

  2. There is no supportive evidence meriting any kind of top priority for any of this nonsensical development. It is a politico-corporate get rich quick scheme. A cost + project that will bleed every tax dollar the corrupted morass can amass and exploit every subsidy our crooked City Hall can deliver.

    In 59 years we haven’t ever been able to support an NBA franchise (0-2) nor an NHL franchise (0-1).

    The corporate monopolization of tickets for any players concerts or sports is already cost preventive, not to mention there are several concert venues in this county that already suit that segment of the market.

    If we actually had representation in our own City government, and if we all, somehow, disillusionally decided we do want or need vacant sports arena, then let’s stick with the one that is wholly underutilized and completely paid for. (It’s called fiscal responsibility)

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