Posted
What's still standing? Basically, just the historic Big Dipper roller coaster, the Raging Wolf Bobs roller coaster, the Skyscraper observation tower and the main entrance building. Last week, large, orange-colored, spray-painted "X's" appeared on most of the remaining buildings and large demolition equipment has arrived at the park. The true fate of the Big Dipper is still unknown.
Read more and see video from WKYC/Cleveland.
I was wondering the whole time what all those white dots were, then realized that they're the footers for Knight Flight.
It is really a shame. Can't help but think what would've happened if Funtime would've sold to Busch when they wanted to buy it.
I really think that if they would've sold to Busch, that the Sea World brand could've made that park work. Even with combining the gates.
Some of you guys want to make this purely a mismanagement issue. While that surely may have hastened the demise of the park, I feel strongly that it was inevitable regardless. The closing of almost all of the area's water parks were a pretty good indicator. Busch's withdrawal sure sounded like a good indicator as well, I don't care if they had animals or not. (Incidentally, wasn't it you, Rob, who once said that keeping animals would've saved the park?)
And by the way, Cedar Fair's debt load is now down to $1.8 million. They aren't like Six Flags, simply paying on the interest.
I honestly have no idea if I said that keeping the animals wouldn't have saved the park. I do believe the the animals didn't have much to do with the park's fortunes in its later years, especially once Busch was gone. I don't believe the region could have supported another theme park, but I do believe something along the lines of Kennywood could have worked in that location. Six Flags turned the park into something people knew it wasn't, and Cedar Fair's solution was to remove the Six Flags influence without doing anything to otherwise improve the park. Removing the rides that didn't belong made perfect sense, but why weren't they replaced with rides that did belong? The park went from being marketed to death to not being marketed at all. Mismanagement wasn't the only problem, but it was a very big one and it's likely the park would have thrived under proper management.
Nice to see Cedar Fair paying down debt but I think it was foolish to assume that much when all they had to do is look at Six Flags and see what that kind of debt did to a competitor. If I were a stockholder, that would have made me uneasy. And what's to say that debt won't increase again if the market for theme parks softens? Seems to me the parks experiencing the largest increases this year are the smaller ones.
We've been over this countless times. They couldn't attract enough people with A-list rides, and you want them to replace those with lesser rides? They dropped the price to $25 their first year, and the people still didn't come. I don't know how you can get a better value proposition than that. They should have never bought the place.
Comparing them to Six Flags just because they're both park operators yields no useful talking points when it comes to debt. Six Flags got where they are by buying everything they could and making ridiculous cap ex decisions year after year with no plan to recoup their investment. Market softness is not Six Flags' problem. Each acquisition of Cedar Fair was planned to turn around in five years for the most part. I've heard internally that they expected maybe seven or eight years on the Paramount Parks, but that was also derived on the idea that there was a lot of fat to trim from them, and I don't think there was as much as they thought.
Six Flags assumed its debt a lot differently than Cedar Fair did, but debt is debt. It doesn't help that Cedar Fair is ready to close another park, since that's less revenue and therefore less money to be used to pay down debt. I don't think Great America is losing money, although I'll admit I have nothing to support that. It just seems to me that a company should produce more revenue if trying to pay down debt, and instead of selling parks that don't work, maybe making more of an effort to make those broken parks work?
Then, when they were spurned and decided to get out of the market altogether, A-B didn't engage in a scorched earth campaign like the Romans sacking Carthage. They actually sought suitors to purchase the park. They recognized that they could profit by selling the park intact, while still leaving an asset for the community to enjoy.
Those are enough reasons for me to go soft on A-B.
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