Goodell Hears London Calling, But He Should Listen to the London Homesick Blues
The NFL makes its annual regular season trip to London, this time featuring the Glazer-owned Buccaneers in their second trip across the pond, against one of the league’s flagship franchises in the Chicago Bears. It’s the fifth straight season in which the NFL has played a regular season game in London.
If Roger Goodell has his way, there could be many more. The league’s goal is to start playing at least two games in London over the next several years, including featuring certain franchises and getting some of the more popular teams to come over. According to Goodell, getting some teams to become more regular visitors would “lead us to what we ultimately would like to do — have a franchise here in London.”
I’m not someone who necessarily hates change, but I think a London franchise is a non-starter. I don’t see how it would work with the rest of the league. Even setting aside building a brand and having a fanbase (London is large enough that a small percentage of NFL fans may be enough to support a team in the abstract) I think there are just way too many other issues.
London is 5,056 miles from Boston, and that is the closest distance from London to any major city with an NFL team. To put that in contrast, the distance from Miami to Seattle is less than 3,500 miles. San Diego traveled about 2,850 miles to New York for this week’s non-division game. It’s also 5 time zones earlier than any NFL franchise.
A team based in London would have to travel to the continental United States and probably have a “home base” somewhere on the East Coast where they would stay in between consecutive road games, similar to how East Coast teams like the Patriots did when they had consecutive Pacific time zone games a few years ago. Except this would be every road trip, not one time every four years or so. They would have to play 3 or more consecutive home and road games on a regular basis to avoid the constant back and forth of lengthy travel. How many free agents are going to want to sign on for that if they have the choice, not only living abroad for half a year, but also living in various places for half that time? A London team could not host a Sunday or Monday Night game, as the local kickoff time would be after midnight.
I know the NFL sees dollar signs and more fans, but I don’t see how an actual franchise playing 8 home and 8 away games from London is feasible at all. It seems like a grand scheme in theory but the execution will likely leave something to be desired.
[photo via Getty]

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4 Responses to “Goodell Hears London Calling, But He Should Listen to the London Homesick Blues”
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October 23rd, 2011 at 1:22 PM
The bigger problem isn’t the London team traveling to the US. It’s the teams traveling to London. The way they do it now is to give a bye to the teams after the long flights. It will be very hard to that for week 16 games. So basically that team would have to play their final games on the road.
There is no fan base over there. They really don’t care about American football. If the world league didn’t work in places where there American bases there is little chance of this working. At least when the NBA talks about this type of thing it makes a little more sense because Europeans care about basketball.
October 23rd, 2011 at 5:01 PM
I wanna go home with the armadillo …
October 23rd, 2011 at 5:22 PM
“How many free agents are going to want to sign on for that if they have the choice, not only living abroad for half a year, but also living in various places for half that time?”
Plus being in your mid-twenties and a millionaire? That doesn’t sound too rough.
(Totally agree with the post & Tarheel – there’s no local support for it and the travel would be brutal for every opponent.)
October 23rd, 2011 at 9:11 PM
Agree. I would love to know how many of the fans that buy tickets for this game are just Americans living in London and Europe in general compared to actual Englishmen. Right now its the equivalent to when pollsters ask the generic question of who would you vote for Candidate X or generic opposite party member. It easy to get support for the generic but onces its a specific name (team) the support is usally much lower.