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3 NFL Games in London in 2014?

GlassHalfFull

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Am I reading this article correctly? Are there really going to be 3 NFL games in London next season? Yikes, that seems a bit overboard. I am opposed to the concept of having a team based there, but this seems to be where we are heading.

Dallas, Detroit, Miami to play NFL London in 2014

LONDON (AP) -- The Dallas Cowboys, Detroit Lions and Miami Dolphins will travel to London next year to take part in the NFL International Series, the league announced Thursday.

The NFL will hold three games at Wembley Stadium in 2014, with the Jacksonville Jaguars, Atlanta Falcons and Oakland Raiders as the designated home teams.

The lineup: Cowboys vs. Jaguars, Lions vs. Falcons, and Dolphins vs. Raiders.
 
Eventually, I think we will see the Jaguars moved to London. Khan, the owner of the Jags, is also the owner of the EPL team Fulham. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see them move there and share that stadium until they can build a new one to be split between the two.
 
Eventually, I think we will see the Jaguars moved to London. Khan, the owner of the Jags, is also the owner of the EPL team Fulham. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see them move there and share that stadium until they can build a new one to be split between the two.

And which teams are going to agree to send their players on a 15-hour round trip flight to play them? The Texans, Titans nor the Colts likely won't.

These games are a cute novelty and all, but, the logistics of a team in London are not there.
 
Hopefully the Texans will never be penalized with a game in London.
 
And which teams are going to agree to send their players on a 15-hour round trip flight to play them? The Texans, Titans nor the Colts likely won't.

These games are a cute novelty and all, but, the logistics of a team in London are not there.

I think there are 29 other teams in the league that will have a vote on that. It might not be ideal for those in their division, but for the league itself, it will mean more revenue. Certainly a lot more than what Jacksonville has ever been worth.
 
Hopefully the Texans will never be penalized with a game in London.

They are attempting to avoid any divisional games.

Me too. Europe doesn't follow the nfl. If they are hard up for an international team then send a team to Mexico City or Toronto/Vancouver/Montreal.

Yup. Mexico City makes 10X more sense. Huge population. Existing large venues and more to the point an existing American football interest. They have a professional league in Mexico now.
 
I think the travel thing is seriously overblown. There are five time zones between New York and London -- compared to three between New York and LA. It's an 11 hour round trip flight from New York to San Diego but no one screams that players won't be able to make the flight. They play one game a week for crying out loud. Just have a permanent practice camp for visiting teams and fly them into or out of England on Tuesday or something. I find it hard to believe that athletes in their 20s can't handle the strain of a five hour time change 8 times a year after four days to adjust. Musicians, Actors, and other entertainers can handle it. Other athletes can handle it. Businessmen and politicians can handle it.
 
I think the travel thing is seriously overblown. There are five time zones between New York and London -- compared to three between New York and LA. It's an 11 hour round trip flight from New York to San Diego but no one screams that players won't be able to make the flight. They play one game a week for crying out loud. Just have a permanent practice camp for visiting teams and fly them into or out of England on Tuesday or something. I find it hard to believe that athletes in their 20s can't handle the strain of a five hour time change 8 times a year after four days to adjust. Musicians, Actors, and other entertainers can handle it. Other athletes can handle it. Businessmen and politicians can handle it.

It's not that they can't handle it, but it sure puts you at a competitive disadvantage against teams in your division who didn't have to travel.
 
Eventually, I think we will see the Jaguars moved to London. Khan, the owner of the Jags, is also the owner of the EPL team Fulham. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see them move there and share that stadium until they can build a new one to be split between the two.

I think we are a loooong way away from having a team actually based in London. It's one thing to sell out 3 games with various opponents and having to sell out 8 of potentially crappy team + preseason. Playoffs shouldn't be a problem I'm assuming.

Also, I don't think Fulham and London Jags would ever be able to share a stadium. Fulham is a smaller club that probably wouldn't be able to draw over 40K fans for even the bigger matches (Fulham fans, don't kick me too hard, all I'm saying is that Fulham isn't Arsenal, MU, or even Tottenham). EPL clubs don't like to play in front of big half empty stadiums any more than the NFL does. And a 40K seat stadium is not enough for a successful NFL franchise. In addition to that, the field would not be able to recover from the football game to the next soccer game on a regular basis.

So, I think there are a lot of logistics to figure out just in London, that's before we get to schedule, travel, etc, etc. I'd say 10 years at the earliest for the possible move.
 
I think the travel thing is seriously overblown. There are five time zones between New York and London -- compared to three between New York and LA. It's an 11 hour round trip flight from New York to San Diego but no one screams that players won't be able to make the flight. They play one game a week for crying out loud. Just have a permanent practice camp for visiting teams and fly them into or out of England on Tuesday or something. I find it hard to believe that athletes in their 20s can't handle the strain of a five hour time change 8 times a year after four days to adjust. Musicians, Actors, and other entertainers can handle it. Other athletes can handle it. Businessmen and politicians can handle it.

Musicians and actors often travel several DAYS before a show. That gives them time to adjust. Businessmen also build in two or three days to adjust to jet lag.

Football players put their bodies on the line. This is a physical sport. Flying in and out of the United Kingdom is not going to work if you have to turn around, take ANOTHER long flight, and then get home, rest, and preparing for the following weeks game.

Also, because of the jet stream, flights FROM the Europe TO the United States are often a few hours long. Houston to Paris, for example, is 8 hours. Paris to Houston, by contrast, is 11 hours.

Also, regarding flying NY to San Diego: when you do that you are gaining 3 hours. And players aren't in San Diego long enough to adjust to the time difference, so jet lag is not as much a factor.

When you fly to Europe, however, you are losing 6 or 7 hours. That's why most flights to Europe leave the US at night: so they can arrive in England first thing in the morning (and, so they can allow US passengers to connect on later outbound flights).

A team in London will never happen.
 
I think there are 29 other teams in the league that will have a vote on that. It might not be ideal for those in their division, but for the league itself, it will mean more revenue. Certainly a lot more than what Jacksonville has ever been worth.

Bob McNair, Jim Isray and the next Titans own will not let that happen. Such a move would mean THEIR players and staff would have brutal travel schedules. Nope. Won't happen.

And: Jerry Jones is the Big Dog in the NFL. What he says goes. McNair is in good with Jones, and would simply tell Jerry to lobby against such a move.
 
I think the travel thing is seriously overblown. There are five time zones between New York and London -- compared to three between New York and LA. It's an 11 hour round trip flight from New York to San Diego but no one screams that players won't be able to make the flight. They play one game a week for crying out loud. Just have a permanent practice camp for visiting teams and fly them into or out of England on Tuesday or something. I find it hard to believe that athletes in their 20s can't handle the strain of a five hour time change 8 times a year after four days to adjust. Musicians, Actors, and other entertainers can handle it. Other athletes can handle it. Businessmen and politicians can handle it.

I agree that the travel thing isn't a big deal. The game is still played at noon central time (I'm guessing that's the only acceptable time slot for games in London). If you don't try to adjust to the local time, leave your body clock on your own time zone, then it's just like a noon game with a long flight.
 
Musicians and actors often travel several DAYS before a show. That gives them time to adjust. Businessmen also build in two or three days to adjust to jet lag.

Football players put their bodies on the line. This is a physical sport. Flying in and out of the United Kingdom is not going to work if you have to turn around, take ANOTHER long flight, and then get home, rest, and preparing for the following weeks game.

Also, because of the jet stream, flights FROM the Europe TO the United States are often a few hours long. Houston to Paris, for example, is 8 hours. Paris to Houston, by contrast, is 11 hours.

Also, regarding flying NY to San Diego: when you do that you are gaining 3 hours. And players aren't in San Diego long enough to adjust to the time difference, so jet lag is not as much a factor.

When you fly to Europe, however, you are losing 6 or 7 hours. That's why most flights to Europe leave the US at night: so they can arrive in England first thing in the morning (and, so they can allow US passengers to connect on later outbound flights).

A team in London will never happen.

Umm football players would travel several days before a game too. Eight times a year. Maybe 32 or 40 nights in a hotel room a year -- depending on whether they spend four or five nights per game on the road as the visiting team. The horror!

They said the same thing about MLB on the West Coast in the 50's. It was unreasonable because teams couldn't travel cross country for games. A train ride in 1957 from Philadelphia to San Francisco was a hell of a lot longer and less comfortable than a plane ride across the Atlantic today.
 
It's not that they can't handle it, but it sure puts you at a competitive disadvantage against teams in your division who didn't have to travel.

But you also gain a home field advantage when teams travel to you.

What the heck is wrong with having a home field advantage anyway?
 
I recall that when the Vikings played a few weeks ago, their next week was a bye. I didn't look up the team that they played to see if that was the case with them as well.

I look at the teams playing in another country as marketing a quality product. If players began to show concern about the schedule, I will rethink my opinon.
 
I recall that when the Vikings played a few weeks ago, their next week was a bye. I didn't look up the team that they played to see if that was the case with them as well.

I look at the teams playing in another country as marketing a quality product. If players began to show concern about the schedule, I will rethink my opinon.

The team they played was Pittsburgh and they also were on a bye the following week. The two teams that play in London this week (SF/Jac) have byes next week.
 
Curious why the nfl is pushing this.cheaper to play there than LA? Stadium hold more people in london than LA.
Also not sure about the dollar to pounds conversion rate

Just throwing out la. It could be mexico city (security be ok there)

Canada? Piss off their league play?
 
Musicians and actors often travel several DAYS before a show. That gives them time to adjust. Businessmen also build in two or three days to adjust to jet lag.

Football players put their bodies on the line. This is a physical sport. Flying in and out of the United Kingdom is not going to work if you have to turn around, take ANOTHER long flight, and then get home, rest, and preparing for the following weeks game.

Also, because of the jet stream, flights FROM the Europe TO the United States are often a few hours long. Houston to Paris, for example, is 8 hours. Paris to Houston, by contrast, is 11 hours.

Also, regarding flying NY to San Diego: when you do that you are gaining 3 hours. And players aren't in San Diego long enough to adjust to the time difference, so jet lag is not as much a factor.

When you fly to Europe, however, you are losing 6 or 7 hours. That's why most flights to Europe leave the US at night: so they can arrive in England first thing in the morning (and, so they can allow US passengers to connect on later outbound flights).

A team in London will never happen.


There is not a 3 hour difference flying from Paris to houston vs houston to Paris. It's about 9 1/2 from houston to Paris and 10 3/4 from Paris. Let's not make up a 3 hour difference
 
Bob McNair, Jim Isray and the next Titans own will not let that happen. Such a move would mean THEIR players and staff would have brutal travel schedules. Nope. Won't happen.

And: Jerry Jones is the Big Dog in the NFL. What he says goes. McNair is in good with Jones, and would simply tell Jerry to lobby against such a move.

One game a year in London for the division teams guaranteed. Then 5 other teams will also have to make the trip each year, and those teams will vary. It's really not that big of a deal.

Jacksonville is a ****ty city, with a ****ty following, ****ty revenue streams currently, and it's not going to improve any time soon. London is a brand new market, with millions of new fans, and it might entice the rest of the continent to start watching. That revenue alone would outweigh another failed LA team. I think Goodell wants to open up this market, and I think he wants this to be part of his legacy as commish. It makes a lot more sense than Canada or Mexico, the UK is much more lucrative.
 
One game a year in London for the division teams guaranteed. Then 5 other teams will also have to make the trip each year, and those teams will vary. It's really not that big of a deal.

Jacksonville is a ****ty city, with a ****ty following, ****ty revenue streams currently, and it's not going to improve any time soon. London is a brand new market, with millions of new fans, and it might entice the rest of the continent to start watching. That revenue alone would outweigh another failed LA team. I think Goodell wants to open up this market, and I think he wants this to be part of his legacy as commish. It makes a lot more sense than Canada or Mexico, the UK is much more lucrative.

They also have a stadium in place in London. Toronto and Mexico City would have to build one. Rogers Centre is not large enough, and Azteca would easily be the worst stadium in the NFL if they put a team in Mexico.

Compared to LA I think a team in London has a better chance of being a regional team than a team in LA. A fourth team in California really only brings the LA market. London would bring all of the UK. Britain is small enough that fans could come from across the country for games.
 
They also have a stadium in place in London. Toronto and Mexico City would have to build one. Rogers Centre is not large enough, and Azteca would easily be the worst stadium in the NFL if they put a team in Mexico.

Mexico City would not have to build a new stadium. They have a 105k stadium with almost 1000 suites. Renovations to that would be fine.

And frankly so what if it isn't typical US opulence? Only Canada of the options being discussed would draw a significant visiting fan population. It won't be a typical US audience.

I don't think London is insurmountable but I think you and Dutch are (a) being flippant about the travel inconvenience and (b) over estimating the interest/revenue in London. The only country which took to NFL Europe was Germany. In England American football is a novelty. In Mexico it has an enthusiastic audience.
 
One game a year in London for the division teams guaranteed. Then 5 other teams will also have to make the trip each year, and those teams will vary. It's really not that big of a deal.

Jacksonville is a ****ty city, with a ****ty following, ****ty revenue streams currently, and it's not going to improve any time soon. London is a brand new market, with millions of new fans, and it might entice the rest of the continent to start watching. That revenue alone would outweigh another failed LA team. I think Goodell wants to open up this market, and I think he wants this to be part of his legacy as commish. It makes a lot more sense than Canada or Mexico, the UK is much more lucrative.

Are you aware of how close Houston is to Mexico City? The flight down there from here is laughable. Hell, Denver, LA, San Diego, and other cities West of here would be even closer.

Mexico is a MUCH more viable market than the United Kingdom, financially and logistically.

Also: Goddell wants his legacy to be 1) Dealing with the concussion issue and player safety and 2) Getting a team in Los Angeles.

London is a novelty. Nothing more.
 
Mexico City would not have to build a new stadium. They have a 105k stadium with almost 1000 suites. Renovations to that would be fine.

And frankly so what if it isn't typical US opulence? Only Canada of the options being discussed would draw a significant visiting fan population. It won't be a typical US audience.

I don't think London is insurmountable but I think you and Dutch are (a) being flippant about the travel inconvenience and (b) over estimating the interest/revenue in London. The only country which took to NFL Europe was Germany. In England American football is a novelty. In Mexico it has an enthusiastic audience.

I'm not opposed to games in Mexico or Germany, but I think you are underselling the UK. 1.3 million Brits watched the Super Bowl pregame show on BBC in 2011 despite it coming on at midnight (I can't find any reports for the game ratings themselves), compared to 1.23 million Germans who watched last year's game (admittedly it aired even later there).


Let's keep things in perspective. The NFL has played at least one game in London every year since 2007. They have played a total of 16 NFL games in London (seven regular season and nine preseason). Berlin has hosted four games, none since 1994. They played seven total games in Mexico - one was regular season (Tokyo has hosted nearly twice as many games) They haven't played a game in Mexico (or anywhere other than Canada or England) since 2005:

The N.F.L. also held a regular-season game in Mexico City in 2005 that drew more than 103,000 fans to Estadio Azteca, but the league has not returned, reportedly because the stadium is considered inadequate.

Azteca doesn't come anywhere close to Wembley, the host Stadium of the 2012 Olympics. Roger Goodell has openly discussed hosting the Super Bowl in London..They have already tried to become a permanent tenant at Wembley once. I don't think it's flippant or over estimating in the least to say the NFL considers London a far more attractive candidate:

Eric Grubman, the league's Executive Vice President of Business Ventures, addressed the teams as part of the International Committee presentation at the meeting less than two weeks ago, and spoke in certain terms about the desire to have a team in London, sources said, with numerous attendees leaving the meeting with the impression this initiative will result in a team moving to London more quickly than owners had previously imagined.

“Grubman pretty much flat-out said, ‘We want to have a team in London -- our goal is to get a team there and make this happen,'” said one source who was present for the meeting. “It didn't sound like an if, we took it as a when.”

Said another source at the meeting: “I don't even know why they call it the International Committee. They should just call it the London Committee. It's pretty obvious everything is geared to the U.K. and, really, Wembley Stadium. I left that meeting thinking this isn't 20 years away, this is happening in five to 10 years. The league is really behind this.”
 
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Good lord, why argue over something so easy to look up?

United Airlines non-stop"
Intercontinental to Heathrow 9 hours 25 min.
Heathrow to Intercontinental 10 hours 45 min.
So 1 hour 20 min. longer to US.
 

The Super Bowl attracted 4.3m across the BBC and Sky. Compare that with the 2010 World Cup final, which was watched by 24m people in the US.

I saw that 4m figure from the NFL somewhere last night but I didn't cite it because that seemed too high. That would mean 7% of the country stayed up to watch a game in the dead of night in Great Britain, compared to 7.5% of the US that watched the World Cup (btw held quadrennially not annually) at 2:30 EST in the US.
 
Good lord, why argue over something so easy to look up?

United Airlines non-stop"
Intercontinental to Heathrow 9 hours 25 min.
Heathrow to Intercontinental 10 hours 45 min.
So 1 hour 20 min. longer to US.


I looked it up before I posted the first time to verify but when I went to turkey earlier this year is was an hour and change longer on the way back so I knew 3 was well off
 
If the Jags moved to London, you can't keep them in a South division any more, right? I mean, London is further north than every Canadian team but one. Move them to the AFC East and Miami to the AFC South. Those AFC East teams (Buf, NYJ, NE) are a couple of hours closer and the Texans wouldn't have to make that trip every year.
 
Think I read somewhere that roger is hell bent on LA and or London

Kinda not an If but a when ..tone
 
It will happen eventually whether we like it or not

London has sold our every game. Mexico City isn't even a consideration so I don't know why anyone's even talking about it


Nfl Europe is meaningless. Of course no one cared about it. How many of you watch the mlb minor league games? I wouldn't watch an nfl Europe team if they were the only teams I had access to either. Inferior played, limited marketing, poor play, very low stakes.
 
Think I read somewhere that roger is hell bent on LA and or London

Kinda not an If but a when ..tone

It could've been this article posted earlier today on PFT.

With the NFL eyeballing a return to Los Angeles and expansion to London, Commissioner Roger Goodell addressed for the first time his preferred pecking order.

“I want both, but it doesn’t matter which one is first,” Goodell told a forum of European NFL fans, via Bill Williamson of ESPN.com.

LINK
 
If the Jags moved to London, you can't keep them in a South division any more, right? I mean, London is further north than every Canadian team but one. Move them to the AFC East and Miami to the AFC South. Those AFC East teams (Buf, NYJ, NE) are a couple of hours closer and the Texans wouldn't have to make that trip every year.

If it happens, I wouldn't count on anything. The Cardinals existed in the NFC East from 1988 (The year they relocated to Arizona) until 2002 even though there was only one team in the entire NFC that was further west than they were.

The NFL's hand was finally forced when on the heels of the Ravens/Browns addition, the creation of the Texans made a two conference/six division league no longer feasible.

Who knows what would actually happen, but to say a relocated Jaguar franchise would absolutely have to result in a re-allignment (even a minor one) probably isn't the case.
 
London has sold our every game.

Nfl Europe is meaningless. Of course no one cared about it. How many of you watch the mlb minor league games? I wouldn't watch an nfl Europe team if they were the only teams I had access to either. Inferior played, limited marketing, poor play, very low stakes.

Your logic is backwards. The current London games are almost meaningless. It is a novelty. You could sell out 1 game a year in El Paso. Doesn't mean it will support a team.

NFL Europe on the other hand is very relevant to interest level. Same players, same marketing, same play the Germans were interested and the English were not. That's what all these games are about - trying to build an interest where little exists.
 
It will happen eventually whether we like it or not

London has sold our every game. Mexico City isn't even a consideration so I don't know why anyone's even talking about it


Nfl Europe is meaningless. Of course no one cared about it. How many of you watch the mlb minor league games? I wouldn't watch an nfl Europe team if they were the only teams I had access to either. Inferior played, limited marketing, poor play, very low stakes.

People are talking about Mexico City because Mexico City is an extremely short flight. It's do-able.

The NFL can "talk" London all they want, but, that's just to sell tickets in the moment and build excitement.

I haven't even talked about the expense to fly a jumbo jet across the Atlantic, whether or not London-based NFL players will be paid in British Pounds or US dollars and how that conversion rate would essentially double NFL player salaries under the next Collective Bargaining Agreement, whether or not the London-based team staff would be subject to US taxes, whether they will be subject to European Union labor and employment laws...and a zillion other logistical issues that make a team in London a non-starter.

The NFL will never have a team in London.
 
Your logic is backwards. The current London games are almost meaningless. It is a novelty. You could sell out 1 game a year in El Paso. Doesn't mean it will support a team.

NFL Europe on the other hand is very relevant to interest level. Same players, same marketing, same play the Germans were interested and the English were not.

It's an indicator but certainly not the sole factor. Should we assume that the NFL would fail in Birmingham or San Antonio because their WLAF teams drew poorly?

TEAM ATTENDANCE

London 40,481; New York-New Jersey 32,380; Montreal 31,882; Frankfurt 29,856; Barcelona 29,002; Birmingham 25,500; Orlando 19,537; Sacramento 17,994; San Antonio 14,853; Raleigh-Durham 12,066;

SOURCE: WLAF

I think games would do very well in Germany, but that doesn't mean that London is a sham. The NFL has come a long way in a very short time there.
 
Your logic is backwards. The current London games are almost meaningless. It is a novelty. You could sell out 1 game a year in El Paso. Doesn't mean it will support a team.

NFL Europe on the other hand is very relevant to interest level. Same players, same marketing, same play the Germans were interested and the English were not. That's what all these games are about - trying to build an interest where little exists.

Nfl Europe players were meaningless games with basically garbage players on teams with zero history playing against equally meaningless franchises.
You can't compare interest in that with the draw of the packers in London to play against whatever team ends up there.

Like I said, I would never pay to see the nfl Europe players on an nfl Europe team. Even when I lived in a state with no nfl team, it wouldn't have interested me. It's comparing apples and oranges. It's the same reason I don't care about arena football. But you wouldn't judge a city's ability to support a franchise by how popular their novelty leagues are
 
People are talking about Mexico City because Mexico City is an extremely short flight. It's do-able.

The NFL can "talk" London all they want, but, that's just to sell tickets in the moment and build excitement.

I haven't even talked about the expense to fly a jumbo jet across the Atlantic, whether or not London-based NFL players will be paid in British Pounds or US dollars and how that conversion rate would essentially double NFL player salaries under the next Collective Bargaining Agreement, whether or not the London-based team staff would be subject to US taxes, whether they will be subject to European Union labor and employment laws...and a zillion other logistical issues that make a team in London a non-starter.

The NFL will never have a team in London.



The currency would be a non issue. Either your contract is in usd, eur or gbp and that's how you get paid no matter where you play. The cost of the jumbo jet wouldn't be an issue either. You are making up a handful of things that aren't actual issues
 
The currency would be a non issue. Either your contract is in usd, eur or gbp and that's how you get paid no matter where you play. The cost of the jumbo jet wouldn't be an issue either. You are making up a handful of things that aren't actual issues

The currency isn't an issue? The exchange rate with the British Pound is leveraged towards the British Pound. And has been for a long time. If we pay London-based players in British Pounds, they'd be making much more than American-based players. Do you really think the players Union would be ok with that?

If you pay London-based players in American dollars, that would be an issue as well, because the cost of living in London is so high that you'd have to pay them well above what NFL players in other markets are making.

Hauling a massive jumbo jet across the Atlantic isn't an issue? Are you kidding me? You think it's free to run those big jets across the pond? The owners will have to spend massive more amount of money on travel than they already do.

I am not making things up. These are all, real-world, legit issues. You are being obtuse.
 
Hauling a massive jumbo jet across the Atlantic isn't an issue? Are you kidding me? You think it's free to run those big jets across the pond? The owners will have to spend massive more amount of money on travel than they already do.

Bring back the Concorde!
 
Lolz at guys making millions not being able to afford living in London. Okay Latrell Sprewell. How can anyone afford it on 500k a year? We'll have to rewrite the rookie pay scale and eliminate the salary cap so their players can eat!

The cost of living in London is relatively close to living in New York or San Francisco. Do we have to pay guys more to play for the Giants than the Packers?

http://www.expatistan.com/cost-of-living/index
 
Lolz at guys making millions not being able to afford living in London. The cost of living in London is relatively close to living in New York or San Francisco. Do we have to pay guys more to play for the Giants than the Packers?

http://www.expatistan.com/cost-of-living/index

Ah, I knew that one was coming. Understand that it's about the exchange rate, and international tax laws. The American dollar does not go far in London. So, if you pay players in British Pounds, that's good, but, that's kind of screwing US-based players. Yes, we would likely have to pay players living in London more money.

Anyway, this conversation is getting superflous, and none of us will agree. Understand that I'm not saying it's IMPOSSIBLE to have a team in London; it is possible. I just think the logistics - combined with the cheapness of the owners - make is more complicated than most of us realize.
 
Ah, I knew that one was coming. Understand that it's about the exchange rate, and international tax laws. The American dollar does not go far in London. So, if you pay players in British Pounds, that's good, but, that's kind of screwing US-based players. Yes, we would likely have to pay players living in London more money.

Anyway, this conversation is getting superflous, and none of us will agree. Understand that I'm not saying it's IMPOSSIBLE to have a team in London; it is possible. I just think the logistics - combined with the cheapness of the owners - make is more complicated than most of us realize.

Dude I was in London last summer. My dollar did fine. 50 pounds a night for a decent hotel near Kensington. Beer was 2 pounds or so on average. Fast food was 3 or 4 pounds -- a decent dinner was 10 to 20. The pound was trading at 1 to 1.6 or so, so add 50% and you can see exactly how far my dollar went.

France cost me much more.

500,000 dollars a year (the minimum for a guy with 1 year's experience) equates to 310,000 pounds. Seriously, you don't think they can live on that? You think they need a subsidy?

Not to mention that we'd have to deal with the exchange rate and international tax laws if we expand to Mexico too. I'm pretty sure that players AND owners would rather tie their dollars to the pound than the peso. It's a helluva lot more stable for starters.
 
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