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Yesterday — 5 June 2026Main stream

Mike Bianchi: Vegas is skating circles around Orlando as a big-league sports town

ORLANDO, Fla. — As the Vegas Golden Knights skate in yet another Stanley Cup Final, Orlando should be asking itself an uncomfortable question:

How is Las Vegas about to become a four-sport major league city before Orlando has even landed a second team in one of the four major sports leagues in this country?

Think about it.

Ten years ago, Las Vegas was considered an impossible sports market. League commissioners openly worried about gambling. Skeptics insisted tourists wouldn’t support teams. Conventional wisdom said Sin City was built for weekend visitors, not season-ticket holders.

Today?

Vegas has the NHL’s Golden Knights plus the NFL’s Raiders and will soon have Major League Baseball’s Athletics. And, yes, most industry insiders fully expect Las Vegas to soon land an NBA expansion franchise.

That’s all four major league teams in the 40th-largest media market in the country. Plus, Vegas is home to the WNBA’s Aces.

Meanwhile, Orlando — the nation’s 15th-largest media market and the largest market in America without an NFL or MLB franchise — still has only one team (the Magic) in the country’s four most popular sports leagues, as well as Orlando City and the Orlando Pride.

That’s it.

And that’s the frustrating part.

For years, Orlando possessed many of the same advantages Vegas eventually leveraged into sports dominance. We have world-class tourism infrastructure. We host nearly 80 million visitors annually. We have convention business, corporate hospitality opportunities, hotel capacity and one of the fastest-growing populations in America.

In fact, Orlando’s metro population is roughly twice that of Las Vegas. Yet somehow Vegas became the sports capital of the desert while Orlando remains the city of potential.

Why?

Because Las Vegas had something Orlando lacked:

Urgency.

Vision.

And political leadership willing to aggressively pursue pro sports as an economic engine.

When Vegas leaders saw an opportunity, they didn’t hold another committee meeting. They secured public funding and built stadiums. They convinced leagues that sports tourism wasn’t a side benefit of their economy; it was a major part of their economy’s future.

The Golden Knights became the proof of concept. Their instant success shattered every outdated stereotype about Las Vegas being an unsuitable sports town. Suddenly, the Raiders wanted in. The Athletics followed. The NBA is almost certainly next.

Vegas didn’t stumble into becoming a sports destination. It made a conscious decision to become one. Orlando, by contrast, has spent years treating sports as something nice to have rather than something worth aggressively pursuing.

Orlando hosts events. Vegas acquires franchises.

There’s a difference.

But the good news is Orlando may finally be waking up. Political leaders and business leaders are finally rallying around the effort to bring Major League Baseball to Central Florida.

For the first time, Orlando’s sports ambitions are starting to feel somewhat coordinated rather than aspirational.

And maybe that’s the lesson Vegas has taught us.

Sports isn’t just entertainment anymore.

It’s tourism.

It’s economic development.

It’s branding.

It’s convention business.

It’s national relevance.

Las Vegas figured that out a decade ago and raced past cities that should have had a head start, including Orlando.

The Golden Knights reaching another Stanley Cup Final should serve as both inspiration and irritation for Central Florida sports fans.

Inspiration because Vegas built something remarkable.

Irritation because Orlando has had every opportunity to do the same.

The encouraging part is that Orlando finally appears ready to stop watching the race and start running it.

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