W_Z wrote:
we do not have more than one NFL. even with your needling skills, you can't begin to try and count the...american professional football league. and stop with the "gotcha" crap. i'm not "admitting" or "denying". i'm saying that if there were ever a possibility of this sport expanding to other countries they'd have to have their own contained leagues. and then have a world cup. i could see that working...ahem...IF AMERICAN FOOTBALL CAN CATCH ON.
I wasn't trying to "gotcha". I thought you were saying that the NFL is the only successful football league in the world. They are putting an NFL team in Europe. They don't need other leagues. Now, maybe eventually there would be but it certainly isn't needed. As you have pointed out, we don't need it here. Why would we need it there?
W_Z wrote:
Are you thinking the football season is going to expand to 30 weeks a year? what about the teams that are actually there? they have to fly to america and back? or are they supposed to fly to america for 4 weeks at a time? how could that possibly work? london would need 8 home games, and would need to travel to the US for 8 weeks. how do you see that working? and what about adding those other teams? So that we can accommodate 4 teams on another continent halfway across the world? Even in baseball, which has a huge international market, does not have MLB teams in Argentina or Venezuela or anything. and that doesn't even really cross any new time zones.
The NFL would simply have to add one more week onto the season and give each team two bye weeks, which probably is going to happen either way. It's actually not too difficult, especially with 2 teams. 8 home games. 1 road game in Europe. That leaves 7 games. Do a road trip of 2 games, 3 games, 2 games for the European teams. Plenty of people travel that much every year for business or vacation. The two bye weeks can be used to make the travel easier.
For those who go over and play, you can either play both teams in succession, or you can have teams only go once and give them a bye week afterwards. That isn't any different than what the Lions and Falcons did this year.
It gets really easy if they have 4 teams in Europe. 8 home games. 3 road games in Europe. That means 11 games on the continent. There are any number of ways each of those teams could play 5 games in the states. 2-2-1. 3-2. That isn't that much different than what European soccer teams have done when they've done their American exhibition tours, or what teams do for the World Cup/Olympics/Other tournaments. Spending 3 weeks in a foreign country staying in fancy hotels and getting paid millions is just a hazard of the job.
The biggest problem, which they are slowly working on, is just getting enough interest built up and teaching them enough to understand.
W_Z wrote:
ever thought why we don't have a shared league professional team of any kind in hawaii? and that's part of the US!
The same reason that Alabama and North Dakota don't have a professional team of any kind. If Hawaii had the population of London or Berlin they'd have a team.
W_Z wrote:
go work up a schedule for an NFL season including London, Madrid, Hamburg, and Paris teams so I can laugh at it. AND you have to come up with their team names too.
Sure. This is basically restated from above.
Each of those teams play 8 home games. 3 against the other Euros. 5 against teams from the states. They play 3 road games against the Euros. 5 against teams from the states. This is how the divisional scheduling is now. They go to the States 3 times to play. The first two are 2 game road trips, where they stay in the United States for the middle of the week, and then they get a bye week afterwards. The final road trip is in the final week and always against an East Coast team. If they are a wild card team, they either stay in America to play it on the road, or head home to prepare for it. Otherwise, season is over, or they have a bye week waiting for the playoff game in two weeks.
Alternatively, they could play 3 straight road games, and then two straight road games in the United States. There are a lot of easy ways to get a European team to play 5 games in the United States over 18 weeks, especially if they start or end the season there.
London Monarchs
Madrid Guerreros
Hamburg Hamburgers
Paris Surrender Monkeys