Season three of the Overwatch League kicks off next month, and that means teams are finally gearing up to live and operate out of their home cities. The Houston Outlaws, unfortunately, have not received the warmest of welcomes from their neighbors.
Houston Outlaws general manager Matt âFlameâ Rodriguez said yesterday on Twitter that his team will be uprooting its base of operations after experiencing some trouble with new neighbors in a community called The Woodlands Township in The Woodlands, Texas. The Outlaws were planning to practice out of a house there, but thatâs now unlikely to occur.
âBoomers: 1, Outlaws: 0,â Rodriguez said in a tweet that has since been deleted (but is still viewable on Dexerto). The tweet then linked to a local report from KPRC 2 Investigates about how the teamâs presence in the area has led neighbors to be concerned about âtraffic, noise, and property values.â âWeâll be moving training facilities in the coming weeks,â Rodriguezâs tweet went on. âUnnecessary and stressful.â
In further tweets that have not been deleted, Rodriguez provided the Outlawsâ side of the story. He said that the neighbors sent TV reporters to their front door and generally made them feel unwelcome, despite his claims that the team hadnât even used the house for practice purposes yet, nor was anybody living there. While he acknowledged that the team could be violating covenant restrictions by operating a business in a residential zone, he noted that âwe made all of our plans and intentions very clear from the start with the realtor, the township, and everyone involved. We didnât, like, cut any corners here or fudge paperwork.â
Kotaku reached out to Rodriguez and the Outlaws for more details, but as of this publishing, they had yet to reply.
However, the KPRC 2 report says that a meeting of the Woodlands Residential Design Review Committee yesterday turned up âa host of violations of covenant restrictions,â though it does not state exactly what they are. At this point, the Outlaws can pursue a varianceâthat is, an exception to the rulesâbut in a statement emailed to Kotaku, Woodlands Township director of communications Nick Wolda said that the Residential Design Review Committee has reviewed the Outlawsâ application for a home business and provided a recommendation against granting a variance to the Development Standards Committee in The Woodlands, Texas, which reviews home business applications in the area. Specifically, the Residential Design Review Committee is opposed to the idea because of âthe amount of the home used for the business operation, âthe number of employees,â âcharacteristics of the business the committee did not feel were in keeping with the Neighborhood Character,â and âconcerns for parking.â
In light of all this, it makes sense that Rodriguez and the Outlaws have decided to mosey on.
âThe silver lining of today is no players or staff were living in that house, so nobodyâs homeless, and we already worked with the town to find office spaces nearby to use for the year,â Rodriguez said on Twitter. âThereâs a solid chance this org is just cursed, BUT not really much I can do about that.â