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Has the NFL Finally Found Their "Minor League Pool"?

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Hall of Fame
Meet Major League Football, An NFL Alternative

By Thomas Barrabi Published February 23, 2016 Sports


If you can’t beat the National Football League’s 32 billionaire team owners and $12 billion-a-year revenue stream, join them. That’s the thought process behind Major League Football, a fledgling organization that hopes to become a developmental league for hundreds of athletes who haven’t given up on their dream of playing in the NFL.

NFL executives have publicly discussed the need for a bridge between the college and professional football – a league that would prepare athletes for the physical and mental rigors of playing at the next level. MLFB is one of several upstart organizations seeking to fill the void. Founded in 2014, it has already attracted support from several former NFL coaches, executives and players, including former Dallas Cowboys head coach Dave Campo, former New York Jets head coach-turned ESPN analyst Herman Edwards and former Atlanta Falcons quarterback Chris Miller.

MLFB has neither the resources nor the inclination to compete with the NFL and the NCAA for dominance of the fall sports season. Eight league-owned teams composed of 53 players each will play their games in the spring. Each player, regardless of talent or backstory, will earn $3,000 per win and $2,000 per loss. But the real incentive, both for MLFB’s players and its coaches, is to attract the attention of pro scouts and make the jump to the NFL.

“This league has to do with guys who had an injury here, or were overlooked there, or for whatever reason, we missed the mark,” wide receiver Carlton Mitchell, a fifth-round pick in MLFB’s draft, who has spent time with the NFL’s Cleveland Browns and Atlanta Falcons, told FOXBusiness.com. “Having another opportunity to come in and be looked at and also competing with guys just as hungry as us, I feel like the competition level is going to raise that much more.”

The idea for Major League Football first came together about seven years ago, when a group of former NFL players, personnel executives and sports agents noticed that public demand for professional football had exceeded the supply. They began to research how the league should operate, which cities would host its franchises and fan base demographics.

From the start, the men who would eventually comprise MLFB’s front office decided the league should have a non-adversarial relationship with the NFL. MLFB’s leadership also strove to heed the missteps of other startup football leagues, such as the Donald Trump-backed United States Football League and, later, the United Football League. Both leagues sought to establish themselves as a direct rival to the NFL, only to implode under the weight of the financial strain.

“We tried to have history be a teacher for us, in the sense of what had worked in the past, what was good for past leagues and past experiences, and what didn’t work,” said Frank Murtha, a longtime sports agent and the MLFB’s senior executive vice president. “Part of that was clearly the idea of playing in the spring. We were never going to play in the fall.”

Planning began in earnest in July 2014, when a publicly-traded company called Universal Capital Management acquired the league and turned it into its sole asset. The league owns all eight of its franchises, though its business plan calls for private ownership within a few years.

The MLFB will have television exposure from the start, thanks to a two-year broadcast rights deal with the American Sports Network, and plans to emphasize digital outreach and crowd interaction. Fans may have the chance to call some plays or see unique camera angles. Some rules will differ from the NFL, including the use of a shorter play-clock and the addition of four-point field goals.

“We’re clearly targeting Millennials,” Murtha said. “We’re not going to have a lot of gimmicks in terms of our rules. We’ve got a couple of different rules for the NFL or colleges, but we’re not going to be playing in a box and we’re not going to be playing on a larger or smaller field.”

The league has taken care not to overextend itself financially. Aside from access to the public markets, MLFB is relying on private funding to push its product forward. Earlier this month, the league announced that Asian Global Capital had acquired a $20 million stake and extended a $100 million line of credit.

Coaches have a relatively limited timeframe to prepare their players for MLFB’s inaugural season. Practices are slated to begin in March and the first games are set to occur in April.

Miller, who will coach one of the league’s eight teams, says the time crunch won’t affect the way he teaches his players. The MLFB will focus on “pro-style” schemes and teaching, meant to prepare players for what they’d see in an NFL film room.

“Our focus and emphasis is on an NFL-style game, to get quarterbacks playing from under center, to get a point tight end that’s attached to the tackle, to train linebackers how to read [professional] run schemes,” Miller said.

MLFB officials are confident they have the business acumen and support they need to make their developmental league successful. Its players, including former University of South Carolina standout quarterback Stephen Garcia, recognize the league is their best shot at a pro career.

“All I’m hoping for is a foot in the door,” Garcia said. “I think everybody else wants the exact same thing.”
 
Cool! :thumbup

I'm up for checking out any football during the dreaded offseason. The other sports just don't do much for me, so hopefully this league's design and attitude about trying to be a minor league to the NFL helps it in the long run.
 
That's a step in the right direction but it's still not a true minor league where say a Tom Savage could be learning to play NFL QB, and still have his rights owned by the Texans. If Savage had been in a minor league getting NFL experience these last 2 years (granted, still against pre-season type talent) and maybe most importantly, NFL coaching, he might have been ready to take over the Texans in '16. Or maybe we would have known he wasn't going to be the guy, whatever the case may be.

I'd like to see the NFL adopt a true minor league where the players still belong to their respective teams. For example, rosters get cut from 75 to 53 the last week of pre-season. You could designate 15 of those 22 players to your minor league squad, thus retaining their rights instead of becoming FAs when cut. Every team in the AFC South division would do the same, comprising a minor league team of 60 players. The other divisions do the same, making an 8 team true minor league.

These teams could play in cities without NFL teams, say the AFC South team plays in Shreveport, OKC, Little Rock, Memphis, what have you, somewhere in proximity of the 4 AFC South teams. Likewise with the other 7 teams.

Something's got to be done to teach these college players how to play the NFL game, particularly the QBs. It's just sad that even the top QBs coming out of college have such a low success rate at the next level.

You never hear of a stud baseball player helping a major league team from day one. They all get some minor league tweaking. Albert Pujols, Mike Trout, Bryce Harper, they all spend time on the farm. I think that is needed for football players too, again, particularly QBs.

I like the idea of the "MLF" league, but I'd like it done where you still own the rights to a player and not just have them all being FAs.
 
That's a step in the right direction but it's still not a true minor league where say a Tom Savage could be learning to play NFL QB, and still have his rights owned by the Texans. If Savage had been in a minor league getting NFL experience these last 2 years (granted, still against pre-season type talent) and maybe most importantly, NFL coaching, he might have been ready to take over the Texans in '16. Or maybe we would have known he wasn't going to be the guy, whatever the case may be.

I'd like to see the NFL adopt a true minor league where the players still belong to their respective teams. For example, rosters get cut from 75 to 53 the last week of pre-season. You could designate 15 of those 22 players to your minor league squad, thus retaining their rights instead of becoming FAs when cut. Every team in the AFC South division would do the same, comprising a minor league team of 60 players. The other divisions do the same, making an 8 team true minor league.

These teams could play in cities without NFL teams, say the AFC South team plays in Shreveport, OKC, Little Rock, Memphis, what have you, somewhere in proximity of the 4 AFC South teams. Likewise with the other 7 teams.

Something's got to be done to teach these college players how to play the NFL game, particularly the QBs. It's just sad that even the top QBs coming out of college have such a low success rate at the next level.

You never hear of a stud baseball player helping a major league team from day one. They all get some minor league tweaking. Albert Pujols, Mike Trout, Bryce Harper, they all spend time on the farm. I think that is needed for football players too, again, particularly QBs.

I like the idea of the "MLF" league, but I'd like it done where you still own the rights to a player and not just have them all being FAs.

Would it be the same deal as with PS players. If you get cut, but are designated to go down to the minors but another club wants you on their active roster do they have free rights to grab you? I would assume not since you say the original club maintains the players rights while they are down in the minors.

Im all for a development league of any sorts though. The NFL has been around for far to long to not have one
 
Would it be the same deal as with PS players. If you get cut, but are designated to go down to the minors but another club wants you on their active roster do they have free rights to grab you? I would assume not since you say the original club maintains the players rights while they are down in the minors.

Im all for a development league of any sorts though. The NFL has been around for far to long to not have one

No, I would just discontinue the PS as we know it. You designate your 15 players for development and those players remain with your organization. They play their games in the developmental league during the spring and are available to practice with the team during the season. The PS is what, 10 players now? So that gets bumped up to 15 but you retain their rights, they're your "prospects" so to speak, and can't be signed away by another team.
 
Thats a lot for guys to go through. With Football you have to practice and learn plays. Unless the minor league team is running your same system, which would be hard to do, I'd prefer for guys like savage to just be learning one playbook and getting tutelage from one staff.

Those guys aren't playing in games, but it's still a grind going through an NFL season. To have to turn around and then participate in more practices and games with a minor league team is a lot.

I do agree with expanding the ps though, but I think the minor league should be separate and should be going on now. That way by the start of the season teams can choose from that pool of players either as draft picks or udfa's.

But once you are chosen by a team and are under contract you shouldnt have to spend your off season practicing and playing games only to have to turn around and go back into an NFL season.

Or if teams can sign and designate a bunch of guys to a minor league team then they have by a certain date to designate those guys to their 90 man pre season roster for an NFL call up.

But if you don't designate a guy as an NFL call up by that date, then they become like IR players and are ineligible for the season.
 
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I'd love to see the NFL really make use of this series, you see so many guys with talent not make it due to roster limitations etc. If a guy has only had 2 full seasons of college due to an injury or transfer etc, the practice squad/fake IR really isn't giving them the chance to develop their talent.

I believe the MLB do something similar where they essentially loan developmental players to the minor leagues to give them chance to develop? I'd imagine the talent pool in the NFL would become much stronger fairly quickly if these roster bubble players had a place to go to work on their game in a real competitive situation within a pro coaching environment.
 
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