Hubert Humphrey is credited with having said the Twin Cities would become "a cold Omaha" without the presence of major league sports. The origin of this is alleged to have been in 1976, as the debate over a new home for the Vikings and the Twins was heating up.
Hubert died in 1978 and thus was not around when that new stadium opened in 1982. The timing of his death did make it a layup for the politicians behind the project to name the building the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome.
I don't buy 1976 as the start of the "cold Omaha" phrase when it comes to the Twin Cities and pro sports. I'm certain that Sid Hartman was using it and crediting the Omaha slur to Hubert well before the mid-'70s.
Certainly, the Twin Cities have made quite a renewed commitment to pro sports since the start of this century. The NHL returned in the fall of 2000 with a splendid arena in St. Paul. The Twins battle for a new ballpark came to fruition with the opening of spectacular Target Field in 2010. The largest serving of public largesse will be going to the Vikings, as construction of the $975 million-dollar Taj Ma Zygi gets underway next year with an anticipated opening in 2016.
There is also hope for a $100 million renovation of Target Center, home of the Timberwolves since the fall of 1990. And we have such facility fever around here that there's also going to be an urban ballpark in St. Paul to house the Saints, an independent league team with talent superior to the Dundas Dukes in most summers.
There's going to be a modest upgrade to TCF Bank Stadium, in only its fifth year as home of the football Gophers, to help serve as home to the Vikings for the dome-less seasons of 2014 and 2015.
So, no complaints from here, but guess what? "Cold Omaha" doesn't exactly work as a source of ridicule these days.
Folks tell me there are all kinds of people walking around Omaha with all kinds of money, thanks to an affiliation with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. It's also a booming agriculture and food center.