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Goodell: Multiple games in Britain 'in the next couple of years'

LONDON -- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell expects the league to start playing multiple regular-season games in Britain in the next few years -- an expansion that could lead to putting a franchise in London.

 

Goodell said Friday that "every indicator" shows the British market can support more games and that having a franchise here is of "tremendous interest" to the league. But he stopped short of giving a timeline for expanding the NFL's overseas presence.

"The interest and the enthusiasm for our game continues to grow, and we want to feed that," Goodell said. "We want to respond to that by hopefully bringing more to the UK."

Goodell spoke at a sports conference Friday ahead of Sunday's game between the New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Wembley Stadium. It's the third year in a row that the NFL is staging a regular-season game in London, and the league is now looking into playing at least two games a year in Britain, he said. Aside from London, Manchester and Glasgow, Scotland, are being looked at as potential venues.

"I expect that sometime in the next couple of years, we could be playing multiple games here," Goodell said. "If we brought more than one game here, and it continues to have the same kind of enthusiasm and growth of interest, I think that is about as good of an indicator you can get that it could successfully support a franchise. And that's what we're looking at."

Staging a Super Bowl abroad, however, "is not something that is under active consideration," he said.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft said moving an NFL team to London "would be the right thing to do some time in the next decade."

However, if the league wants more of the current franchises to travel to London for games, the regular season should be extended to 18 games so that teams can keep the same number of home games, Kraft said. The Bucs are giving up a home game this season.

"I'm not sure our fans would appreciate us giving up a regular-season [home] game, and I know I wouldn't like to do that. But eventually I think there's a chance of that if we expand the schedule," Kraft said.

Goodell said he would prefer it if a potential London-based team was a completely new franchise, rather than moving one from an existing market.

"We would like to keep all our teams where they are," he said.

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady didn't sound too enthusiastic about playing for a team based in Europe, however.

"That would be challenging," Brady said. "But I don't see that happening any time soon."

The league is also eyeing the possibility of having a team in Los Angeles again -- especially after California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a bill this week allowing the construction of a 75,000-seat stadium that developers hope will lure an NFL team back to the L.A. area.

"I think there are some positive developments going on there," Goodell said. "But now we have to figure out how to pay for it. And in our economic system, that is a big challenge. It's at least an $800 million stadium."

He would not venture a guess as to what would come first -- a team in London or Los Angeles.

"I don't know about the timing as far as the sequence," he said. "I would tell you that both markets are of tremendous interest to us."

Copyright 2010 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 

Talk Back
Reputation:85
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 4, 2007

October 24, 2009 2:07 pm

Horrible idea by the nfl! So many other American cities deserve & would love to have a team and can't get one! Also it's a safety issue for the players, since the rest of the world hates Americans! Euro's love soccer not football, it will fail like pro soccer fails in the States. The league has already failed in Europe with the world league! I guess seven billion dollars a year isn't e ...(more)

Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 5, 2006

October 24, 2009 1:08 pm

Goodell has some good ideas but this is not 1 of them.

I’m sick of all the talk of taking our game abroad. As a fan of the game I would be livid

If my time lost a home game or wasted half of their bye week recovering from jet lag.

It’s not fair to the teams that travel. What if Tampa Bay was 5-1 and needed a win ag ...(more)

Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 19, 2007

October 24, 2009 11:58 am
This sounds like Goodell is trying to make the sport popular on a global level similar to the NBA's recent sucsess.  I can't fault him for tryig but the interest from fans is not the same as the NBA.  Fans fill stadiums to watch the NFL games right now due to the fact it is once a year and  superbowl like atmosphere for them.  Having multiple games every year will take from tha ...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 12, 2006

October 24, 2009 10:09 am
Does this have to fail before the NFL gets it into their greedy heads ? Since the 1970's how many US alternative American Football sports leagues and teams alone has failed ?
http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news
/sports/2009/july/Long-History-of-F
ailed-Football-Leagues.html

WFL, USFL, WLAF (aka World League, NFL Europe and so on), Canadian Expansions, & the XFL. Now t
...(more)
Reputation:85
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 4, 2009

October 24, 2009 6:28 am
Is the US afraid that the Vince Lombardi trophy will one day reside on foreign soil? Why all the negativity? I understand the feeling of uncertainty but on the UK side of the pond, i and many others would like to remain positive.

Will it affect the quality of the league? No, because it does'nt have to serve as an expansion. Remeber teams are franchises, run by businessmen to make m
...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 3, 2008

October 23, 2009 11:32 pm
I'm sure the NFL brass thinks of nothing but $$$, but they are damaging the product on the field. Ever since free agency and league expansion went wild, the game itself has just gone downhill gradually until this season, when you have at least a dozen terrible teams on the field that are just painful to watch. The most detrimental factor is at the QB position, with only about a half-dozen solid pl ...(more)
Reputation:97
Level:Superstar
Since:Jan 20, 2007

October 23, 2009 4:59 pm
Right now the NFL is hurting in some serious ways. 

Policies that they only enforce once the player gets in trouble, then forces it down their throat.
Moral ambiguity on if a felon or person of crime should play ever again in the NFL.
No tolerance or changes in how the rules are negatively affecting the game.

Now this guy and his band of lackies wants to
...(more)
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 6, 2008

October 24, 2009 8:05 am
If they keep Goodell around, they might as well move the whole d league to Europe.  He's gone out of his way to make media 'splash' at the expense of the fan time after time.

His worst idea was to take away the diehard fans' NFL Draft weekend parties by moving the draft to Thursday.  Unless my Packers are in the playoffs
...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Mar 21, 2008

October 23, 2009 5:20 pm
Aside from the very valid issues of fan base, travel for away teams, and finding players willing to be on a team overseas for half the season, I wonder if any of the braintrust Goodell relies upon has considered what would happen having 300 pound men on a flight that long.  The risk of deep venous thrombosis sitting for hours on a plain is considerable, which could result in pulmonary embolis ...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 10, 2006

October 23, 2009 10:28 pm
 Like the majority of you, I do not support the idea of an NFL team being placed in Europe.  Obviously, it is all about money.  Once you have several countries support American football, then you can have your own European Division.  From a logistics standpoint, the whole idea is illogical and absurd.  The owners would have to be pretty wealthy to pay the airfare, hotels, ...(more)
Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 18, 2006

October 24, 2009 5:54 am
The only football the British like is soccer.  This NFL game is a novelty and sells a great deal of those tickets to people who are curious, and American's who live throughout Europe.  I attended last years game and there were many many more North American's at the game then there were British folks.  There were also quite a few scalpers selling tickets at well below face value outs ...(more)
Reputation:82
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 3, 2007

October 23, 2009 2:25 pm
Many of you have brought up great points. First of all, finances. Second of all, travel. It is not fair to ask a team to handle that kind of travel once a year in my opinion, let alone a regular schedule. No one will want to play there. And despite players saying all the right things when they go over there, there is no prep time. Plus think about players HAVING to move their families there. Their ...(more)
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 19, 2006

October 23, 2009 2:57 pm
That's what we should be talking about.  I love the NFL, and football is my favorite sport.  However, given the current state of the league and it's wealth of horrid teams, maybe it's time to talk about the idea that at 32 teams, college football is incapable of filling 32 rosters with quality players and there isn't enough quality GM's/Coaches to go around.  I understand there ...(more)
Reputation:59
Level:Pro
Since:Jul 3, 2008

October 24, 2009 8:27 am
Putting a team in Europe is crazy. Didn't we just have a league fail over there? When you put the added travel costs and jet lag, its only going to stress the league, players, and fans with the excessive traveling.

Some other alternatives that make much more sense is adding more domestic teams such as L.A. Then after that expanding a few teams into Canada makes more sense than London.
...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 12, 2007

October 23, 2009 5:01 pm
I have yet to hear from one person who thinks this is a really good idea outside of the brass at the league office.  Moreover, most NFL fans think this is a horrid idea, and the possibility of playoff games or a Super Bowl at Wembley stadium is rather offensive.

So that said, it's clearly apparent that the NFL doesn't care what you or I think, and really believes that no matter w
...(more)
 
 
 
 
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