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CAPITAL GAINS: CAPPING OFF A REWARDING STANLEY CUP RUN

          Following tomorrow night's anticipated sellout for Game
     Four of the Stanley Cup Finals, the Capitals will have sold
     200,750 tickets to 11 postseason home games, generating an
     estimated $15M, according to Bill Brubaker of the WASHINGTON
     POST.  But "even more impressive" is the fact that the team
     has sold more than 36,000 tickets for next season: 2,000 10-
     game packages (top price: $600 each), 200 20-game plans (top
     price: $1,200 each) and 300 full season tickets (top prices:
     $2,460 each).  Brubaker writes, "It's doubtful any NHL team
     needed a boost more than the Capitals," who sold only 6,668
     full season tickets this season, "more than 4,000 fewer than
     the NHL club average."  Washington Sports & Entertainment
     President Susan O'Malley said the team has already begun its
     marketing campaign for next season, mailing brochures to
     30,000 potential season-ticket customers.  Brubaker adds
     that ticket brokers were asking $1,200 for $175 seats prior
     to Saturday's Game Three at the MCI Center.  O'Malley, who
     said she anonymously phoned a MD ticket broker to gauge
     interest: "[W]hat these prices show is: Yes, we have
     arrived."  Brubaker writes that the Caps' success "seems to
     have made MCI Center a hotter venue."  Riggs Bank, which
     purchased two "founders suites" for $1M each last year, was
     recently offered $2M for one and Caps broadcasters HTS and
     WBDC-50 "likely will double" ad rates next season.  Last
     Tuesday's Stanley Cup Finals opener drew a 13.7 rating on
     WTTG-Fox in the Washington market -- the highest rating ever
     for a Capitals game (Bill Brubaker, WASHINGTON POST, 6/15). 
     

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