The two strongest pulls in Cedar Point's similarity data are both Cleveland sports franchises — Cleveland Browns at 0.95 and Cleveland Indians at 0.95 — and the gap between them and the rest of the top 10 is the defining structural feature of this graph.
The shape is two-peak, and those peaks are unmistakable. The Browns and Indians sit nearly tied at the top, then the scores step down to Cardale Jones (0.92), McNeil (0.91), and Ohio State Buckeyes (0.91). All five of those neighbors are either Sports Teams or Athletes — the same subcategory pattern holds through Myles Garrett (0.91) and Joe Thomas (0.91). Seven of the top 10 neighbors are Athletes or Sports Teams. The two exceptions are Meijer (social) (0.90), a Grocery and Superstore brand, and Urban Meyer (0.90), classified as a Professional — though his context is squarely within Ohio-area football. The tenth neighbor, Ohio State Football (0.89), returns to Sports Teams. No other Destinations appear in the top 10; Cedar Point's own subcategory is absent from its nearest neighbors entirely.
The geographic concentration is equally notable: Cleveland, Columbus, and the broader Ohio-Pennsylvania-Michigan corridor account for nearly every team and athlete in the set. This audience is shaped less by theme-park interest broadly and more by a specific regional sports identity — one that happens to overlap tightly with two Cleveland franchises above all others.