For an event billed as a community pitch, the Twin Cities' Super Bowl 2018 bid is looking more like a state secret.
Precious few details of the bid being submitted to NFL owners on Wednesday are public. Bid boosters say they have to stay mum lest they lose an edge to the high-level competition from New Orleans and Indianapolis.
Not only will they not talk about how much money they have to raise — an estimated several hundred thousand dollars to prepare the bid and $30 million if the Twin Cities gets the game — but they won't reveal who'll give the presentation to the 32 NFL owners in Atlanta before the vote May 20.
The NFL allows two officials from each city to give a closed-door presentation before the owners privately vote on who gets the game. Gov. Mark Dayton appointed three co-chairs for the bid committee: Richard Davis of U.S. Bank, Doug Baker of Ecolab and Marilyn Carlson Nelson of Carlson Cos. Early word is Davis and Carlson Nelson, who played a key role in bringing the last Super Bowl to the Twin Cities in 1992, will speak to the owners.
The three chairs plan to have a news conference to talk about the bid on Wednesday after the submission deadline. But reports are conflicting on what — if anything — they will share about the bid at the news conference — or ever. Meet Minneapolis, the city's convention and tourism bureau, is physically preparing the bid.
The ballpark estimate is that the bid will cost several hundred thousand dollars to prepare with staff time and travel costs. It will be given to NFL owners and executives on iPads donated by Best Buy.
Kristen Montag, spokeswoman for Meet Minneapolis, said last week, "We still have to do the presentation in Atlanta, and we cannot share details prior to that as we are in competition with two other cities."
Estimates of the economic benefits of hosting a Super Bowl range widely, from less than $100 million to more than $300 million. But boosters argue that the direct income pales in comparison to the public relations bonanza of having your city's charms touted to millions of television viewers.