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#1
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Odd as it sounds, I think two European teams are easier to schedule than one. Some say logistically, a London team would have to spend four weeks at home and four weeks in the U.S. as a way of keeping the players from suffering constant jet lag. I also believe they should have a home base in the U.S. for the purpose of training camp and exhibition games.
The bye week can be used to help visiting teams adjust to their return and the season opener can be held in London on a Thursday so as to allow the first opponent a long week to prepare for Week 2. Having a second European team allows for six teams (New England, the Jets and two rotating teams from the AFC and NFC the way the schedule now works) to play a two-week turn in Europe before having to return home. This would eliminate some of the advantage of playing jet-lagged teams. The one trouble spot I haven't been able to overcome is what happens when a European team is good enough to host a playoff game? It's tough to ask a team out west to fly to a time zone 6-8 hours away with their entire season on the line. It's also not fair to make the European team fly to the States and play at a neutral site if they are the "home" team. I doubt the European fans would find that fair either. |
#2
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Why hell Bob why be so half-hearted about it ?
I say go all-in with it and have an entire Euro division because with four teams scheduling/travel is only a problem for half the games each of them play. |
#3
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The WLAF (World League of American Football known universally as "we laugh") wasn't all that well-received in Europe. London and Germany (Frankfurt, I think) played to good crowds but many other cities (like Paris), it just never caught on.
Jacksonville is a franchise halfway to London for years and the premise is that the Chargers are second banana in a city with no respect for second bananas (right, Clippers?). Speaking for myself, I'm perfectly ok with no European football. I just enjoy toying with the logistics of trying to make this work. Heck, the NFL could put franchises in Toronto and Mexico City if they wanted to but the gentleman's agreement with the CFL (to keep the NFL out of Canada other than exhibitions) would be a hindrance. There's also the issue of exchange rates and monetary compensation going outside the U.S. dollar system. |
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