INDIANAPOLIS —
Leaders of Indiana’s capital city spent decades gussying up their downtown by building big sports and convention venues and luring upscale hotels, popular restaurants and a four-story shopping mall to locate here.
By the time 5,000 credentialed media rolled into town for the spectacle known as Super Bowl XLVI, those leaders were convinced the city had long outgrown its derogatory nickname: “India-no-place.”
But reputations die hard.
On the Sunday before Super Sunday, an Indianapolis-embedded reporter with The New York Times opened his story about the city with not-too-kind references to tractors, homespun scarves and heartland values. Indianapolis, he wrote, was a “useful antonym” for glamour.
That newspaper story — like a multitude of ones just like it in recent days — posed the basic question: How did an un-hip, super-square city like Indianapolis score a Super Bowl? The answer: By letting Indianapolis be Indianapolis.
As two East Coast teams, the New York Giants and the New England Patriots, get ready to play in Sunday’s game, the city hosting the event seems to embracing its Midwest identity.
“I wouldn’t want anybody to take this wrong, but we don’t ever want to be New York,” said Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels.
Letting Indianapolis be Indianapolis is what may have landed the city the Super Bowl on its second try.
Five years ago, the NFL’s 32 team owners who pick Super Bowl sites four years in advance were impressed with Indianapolis’ pitch: It included a new $720 million stadium built mostly with public money; a long history of hosting big sporting events, from the 1987 Pan Am games to multiple repeats of the NCAA Final Four; and the availability of 18,300 hotel rooms within walking distance of the downtown stadium.
But they’re weren’t impressed enough.
Indianapolis lost out on the 2011 Super Bowl to Dallas’ super-sized promise of hosting the best and biggest Super Bowl event in history.
Alison Melangton, president and chief executive officer of the 2012 Indianapolis Super Bowl Host Committee, said her committee members decided to launch a different kind of charm offensive. It built on what she said was a native Hoosier value: “The human touch is really important to us here in Indiana.”
Among the ways the committee employed the touch: It recruited 32 eighth-graders to deliver, in person, the city’s 2012 bid packages to the 32 NFL team owners. And it recruited the city’s legendary St. Elmo’s Steakhouse to send each owner the restaurant’s signature shrimp cocktail.
It also promised to launch a $100-million plus “legacy‚” project aimed at renovating a long-neglected near-downtown neighborhood. And it promised to recruit an army of some 8,000 volunteers — each adorned with a handmade blue-and-white neck scarf — to greet visitors with a super-friendly attitude and directions for how to get around downtown.
Helping the effort along was a promise by Indianapolis Colts’ owner Jim Irsay that his team’s hometown would make good on its promise of Hoosier hospitality. At a press conference Monday, Irsay said the Indianapolis host committee adopted an approach that he described this way: “Ask not what the Super Bowl can do for you. Ask what you can do for the Super Bowl.”
That approach has paid off in dividends, said Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard. “We have a volunteer effort that’s second to none,” Ballard told reporters at that Monday press conference. “Those of you coming in from out-of-town, you’re going to absolutely love our city.”
That expectation might be little high. It’s true that CNBC’s popular sports-business reporter, Darren Rovell, gave the city a boost recently when he declared on ESPN’s “Mike & Mike in the Morning” that Indianapolis as “the best Super Bowl city I’ve ever seen.”
But it might be a little harder to convince others.
Last Sunday, a columnist with the New York Daily News panned the city, saying its old “Nap Town” nickname was well-deserved. He was particularly peeved by the city’s lack of cabs: “You stand on a curb and call your friend with a rental car,” he wrote. “If you actually need a taxi, the best place to locate one is in Chicago.
Maureen Hayden is the Indiana Statehouse bureau chief for CNHI, the parent company of the Tribune-Star. She can be reached at maureen.hayden@indianamediagroup.com.
Local & Bistate
SLIDESHOW: Indy has built rep from ground up
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RESTAURANT INSPECTIONS: April 29-May 3
April 29-May 3:
Garfield's Restaurant & Pub, 3401 S. U.S. 41, Ste D-7 (4 Critical, 2 Non-Critical) Grilled chicken found at 130 degrees -
For Piper: Annual ‘Rush the Punter’ event dedicated to Dixie Bee student who died Wednesday after a short illness
Steve Weatherford’s “Rush the Punter” fundraiser at Fairbanks Park on Saturday was dedicated to a little girl who lost her life unexpectedly to pneumonia.
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Vigo schools prepare to tighten belts
State funding for the Vigo County School Corp. will remain “pretty flat” for the next two years, said Donna Wilson, chief financial officer.
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Veterans take to the trees
Cristal Bednar took photos of her husband, Justin, as he laboriously climbed his way up a “Dangle-Duo” to get to a zipline at Indiana State University’s Sycamore Outdoor Center.
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ISU unveils interactive Bayh Family Legacy Wall at school
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Can you smell me now?
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GIVING BACK: Steve Weatherford buys shoes for kids day before charity run
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N.Y. Giants honor Weatherford as ‘Man of the Year’
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Sunday recital at The Woods
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Police investigating rash of car window shootings
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City hospitals get passing grades for patient safety
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Three from Operation Turn and Burn sentenced in federal court
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Vigo County Jail Log: May 17, 2013
The following individuals were booked into the Vigo County Jail by area law enforcement on Thursday, based on jail records.
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I-70 resurfacing project will close westbound exit ramp
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UPDATE: Fire damages buildings in downtown Greencastle
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Get outside this Memorial Day weekend
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Skateboarders, BMX bike riders working to improve area of city park they use
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Indiana State to host 2014 MVC baseball tourney
Build it… and they will come. The Missouri Valley Conference and Indiana State University made that famous line from the movie “Fields Of Dreams” reality Thursday.
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Overlay recommended for 812 area code
The state agency that represents Hoosier utility customers is calling for a ten-digit solution to southern Indiana’s vanishing supply of 812 area code telephone numbers.
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Elementary school saddened by student’s death
A 9-year-old Dixie Bee Elementary student died unexpectedly Wednesday evening as the result of pneumonia, said Vigo County Coroner Susan Amos on Thursday.
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Vermillion CSX crossings undergoing maintenance
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Beware of scams everywhere
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INDOT to start work on Indiana 163 in Vermillion County
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Union Hospital community garden spots now available
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Correctional officer remembered at memorial
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Money donated for Dresser sculpture
100+ Women Who Care of Vigo County on Thursday awarded a $20,200 grant to Art Spaces that will help make the Paul Dresser sculpture, “A Song for Indiana,” a reality.
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Powerball jackpot quickly jumps to $550 million
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RESTAURANT INSPECTIONS: April 29-May 3




