Re: Relocation
Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2016 4:47 am
Chargers unrelocate to San Diego - http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap300000 ... o-for-2016
PFRA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the history of professional football. Formed in 1979, PFRA members include many of the game's foremost historians and writers.
https://mail.profootballresearchers.org/forum/
https://mail.profootballresearchers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3373
I'm surprised no one's brought up the most obvious roadblock with respect to Las Vegas: the gambling aspect. Considering this was the same league that didn't want NBC to promote their TV SHOW during a game a decade ago because it was titled, Las Vegas, it seems odd that Goodell wouldn't try to "protect the shield." Then again, they've already gotten into bed with Fantasy Sports companies and Goodell is intent on doubling league revenue in the next decade...NWebster wrote:Either San Antonio or Las Vegas come with some issues, not the least that it would require at a minimum a retractable dome or some interesting scheduling. A September 1PM start would be brutal. San Antonio has the advantage in gross population but it's not a particularly affluent one and Vegas is still relatively transient population. I could see lots of visitors making a Raider game the cap on a fun weekend in vegas, but not sure they'd develop much of a fan base.
Vegas isn't exactly Vegas these days. The internet flattened that landscape long ago. Nowadays a vulnerable player in Vegas is more likely to run into a CEO or a diva in between gigs at Caesars than a mob guy looking to buy an edge. Corporations supplanted that element thirty years ago. Today Vegas is made of corporate money - and its safe as milk.BD Sullivan wrote:I'm surprised no one's brought up the most obvious roadblock with respect to Las Vegas: the gambling aspect. Considering this was the same league that didn't want NBC to promote their TV SHOW during a game a decade ago because it was titled, Las Vegas, it seems odd that Goodell wouldn't try to "protect the shield." Then again, they've already gotten into bed with Fantasy Sports companies and Goodell is intent on doubling league revenue in the next decade...NWebster wrote:Either San Antonio or Las Vegas come with some issues, not the least that it would require at a minimum a retractable dome or some interesting scheduling. A September 1PM start would be brutal. San Antonio has the advantage in gross population but it's not a particularly affluent one and Vegas is still relatively transient population. I could see lots of visitors making a Raider game the cap on a fun weekend in vegas, but not sure they'd develop much of a fan base.
Fargo makes more sense than most people would think. If Green Bay can do it, why not Fargo? Great football town (ran into Phil Hansen at a convenience store one late Friday night in my college days, drunk as sh*t (me, not him)).Todd Pence wrote:Cheyenne, Wyoming or Fargo, North Dakota would be better suited to support an NFL franchise than Vegas would.
How much would the Vikings ask for cutting into their territory? Whatever microscopic hope Fargo has depends on them building a 70,000-seat dome, which isn't even going to be considered until the oil market gets back to where it was two years ago. Fargo probably is a great football town, but I can't see it happening in this century.mwald wrote:Fargo makes more sense than most people would think. If Green Bay can do it, why not Fargo? Great football town (ran into Phil Hansen at a convenience store one late Friday night in my college days, drunk as sh*t (me, not him)).Todd Pence wrote:Cheyenne, Wyoming or Fargo, North Dakota would be better suited to support an NFL franchise than Vegas would.
Okay, no way. But great football town. NDSU's QB could be the first QB picked in the NFL draft.
Yeah, not a chance. Fun to contemplate, though. The Dakota Teddys? Bully!BD Sullivan wrote:How much would the Vikings ask for cutting into their territory? Whatever microscopic hope Fargo has depends on them building a 70,000-seat dome, which isn't even going to be considered until the oil market gets back to where it was two years ago. Fargo probably is a great football town, but I can't see it happening in this century.mwald wrote:Fargo makes more sense than most people would think. If Green Bay can do it, why not Fargo? Great football town (ran into Phil Hansen at a convenience store one late Friday night in my college days, drunk as sh*t (me, not him)).Todd Pence wrote:Cheyenne, Wyoming or Fargo, North Dakota would be better suited to support an NFL franchise than Vegas would.
Okay, no way. But great football town. NDSU's QB could be the first QB picked in the NFL draft.