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I mearly said IF they wanted to move into the US, they should use the types of markets I put out there as examples.
The expansion to the US was actually a mixed bag. It wasn't all bad. I think one major problem was the rapid rate of expansion, and then the markets they chose were distant, and not to cities with pro pedigrees.
A city like Buffalo (if the Bills go), or Rochester, HAVE track records as great minor league sports towns, so seeing a CFL team would elevate their perceived status (ok maybe not Buffalo) as minor league to big league, and the team would be embraced. Stay close to the border, where the CFL is somewhat known. Grand Rapids! Rochester! Even a Milwaukee or a Spokane!
Not only would these metro areas be comparable in size to half the existing CFL teams, they have good sports support track records, UNLIKE the Shreveports and Las Vegases of the world.
Look, the CFL knows 8 is not enough. THEY are talking about expansion. You need about 12 to start thinking "we're all set and don't need to expand." Expand SLOWLY, one or even two, but then a good 3 or 4 years to the next. TRY to get things sorted out for Ottawa, Quebec City, Halifax, or even Moncton, but don't automatically preclude the IDEA of going back to the US, using the failed past experiences to learn from. Slow, selective growth will beat out an overnight blitz of new teams any day.
And a marketing campaign can EASILY be changed, don't worry about the Radically Canadian thing..............
Would passports and the increased border restrictions be a problem?
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Mean Spirited Blogger #24601
Accused of being a Cyber Terrorist by Joe Newman.
This league (NIFL) is like a frickin' cockroach. You could throw a nuclear bomb at it and it would still survive
-tony-o
So I'd rather spend a quarter of an ABA franchise to repair my car, as opposed to spending a franchise and a half to get a new car that might have some planned obsolescence that causes it to break down 5 days after the end of the warranty period.
-Chuck the Writer
Of all of the cities the CFL was in down here, only Baltimore drew the fans in. Las Vegas was a joke. I could see the UFL and the CFL getting together, maybe down the road. I love the CFL, and wish they were in the US. I also miss the games on ESPN. I think any expansion plans for the CFL have to include Ottawa and/or the Maritime provinces before they go south again.
THe other thing was when the US expansion took place, other than Sacramento everyone was on a payment plan.
Expansion was 3 million. Sacramento Surge paid up front and changed their name to the Gold Miners from the WLAF. All the other teams were paying 300K a year for 10 years. The CFL braintrust figured this would be a great way to defer the money and keep a steady profit coming in.,,,, until the teams went belly up.
THe only except was Nick or Larry Milleti (can't remember first name). He came in and bought the Las Vegas Posse. He had owned a NBA team and had tried to start a Canadian Basketball League. So he had some credibility. He went to teh CFL and said "lend me 3 million dollars and I'll buy a team". Incredibly the CFL went for this. Vegas folded.
THe NFL loan was only 5 million which was chump-change to them. It definately saved the CFL though.
Some guy in NY tried to put a team in Yankee stadium in the 70's. Even got the blessing of the Yankees to do it. The CFL turned him down on a tight vote.
More recently the CFL has been approached a'la Las Vegas Posse style and someone said "lend me money to build a stadium in Anchorage and I'll put a team there" THe CFL said NO (thats NON in Montreal.)
They had interest in the Detroit-Windsor situation but so far it hasn't panned out. THere also was talk of a Victoria BC team in the early 90's. Victoria had the COmmonwealth games and they were going to build a brand new purpose built stadium for it and get a CFL team. Problem was the Commonwealth games money comes from UK TV rights, Canadian TV rights and Australian TV rights. Victoria is 8 hours behind London, live tv would be on at late night, so the BBC bid low, the stadium idea was killed and they temporarily upgraded UVIC stadium to 20 odd thousand. Now UVIC won't let anyone onto THEIR publically built and financed stadium.
Portland Oregon had a CFL game in the early 90's too to test the market, it did ok. But it was billed as Doug Flutie vs Rocket Ismael and got about 19k.
I'm fairly confident that when the NFL lent the CFL the money to survive they put some things into place that basically said, you stay out of our backyard and we;ll stay out of yours. They were gonna have a yearly (4 downs) game with the Grey Cup champion vs the winner of NFLeuropes world bowl. Problem was for whatever reason they couldn't find a seperate insurance package for it, the current insurance wouldn't allow it and they couldn't find a one off package for resonable money.
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Mean Spirited Blogger Number 14
"If games are missed, it hurts no one" ...... ABA CEO Joe Newman 2/9/09
Due to numerous threats of legal action from certain people.......all of the above is my opinion only and it should be noted that I have never invested in the ABA. It is simply one mans opinion.
The CFL or TSN, had a very weak broadcasting agreement with AmericaOne
network over the past few years. (At least six that I can count). A1 is a
network that provides programming to mostly, low-powered, television
stations.
It is the Canadian cable broadcast of the game, but if your local station has
other programming, it is possible to see the broadcast stop being shown mid-
game. Kind of a let down which I learned this past fall. Most LP stations
get their feeds from several different sources. Those sources, usually don't care
or regulate how their programming is shown.
The last real cable deal in the U.S., I believe was with SportChannel in the early
to mid-90's. It didn't last long.
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A pro football Hall-of-Fame without Art Modell as a contributor is like a Baseball Hall-of-Fame without Pete Rose as a player. What's the point of it???
Proud to be "Mean Spirited, Angry, Bitter Blogging, Blogger #804.1" -- (For Joe Newman I.D. Purposes)
Missing the Continental Basketball Association a little bit more, everyday...
The CFL or TSN, had a very weak broadcasting agreement with AmericaOne
network over the past few years. (At least six that I can count). A1 is a
network that provides programming to mostly, low-powered, television
stations.
It is the Canadian cable broadcast of the game, but if your local station has
other programming, it is possible to see the broadcast stop being shown mid-
game. Kind of a let down which I learned this past fall. Most LP stations
get their feeds from several different sources. Those sources, usually don't care
or regulate how their programming is shown.
The last real cable deal in the U.S., I believe was with SportChannel in the early
to mid-90's. It didn't last long.
Yes America One was a broadcaster of the CFL. However, that's not the only channel the CFL was shown on in the US. According to this list (http://www.cfl.ca/index.php?module=page&id=314) the CFL is also shown on most Comcast Sports Network stations.
However, with the lack of a push to get on tv in the US, leads me to believe the CFL has no major interest in pushing the product there. It seems the tv deal with TSN in Canada is worth enough money to the league, that they are content to be on smaller networks.
Attendance is up in the CFL, merchandising revenues are up, tv revenues are up, is it really necessary for the league to focus on the US? I don't think so. Its time the CFL realizes that you build the game up at home before you export it elsewhere. Mark Cohon is a smart man and seems to have realized that hasty expansion is not the way to go.
Perhaps one day the CFL will be on ESPN or ESPN2 again, but I'm not sure it matters too much to the league. The deals didn't bring in a pile of cash anyhow. So why bust your neck trying to reach them?
As for expansion into the US, I doubt that would happen any time soon. If it were to occur, the US Immigration Department would have to allow the import ratio. I think in hindsight the CFL realized without the requisite Canadian players on the US teams, the game was not truly Canadian anymore and risked being homogenized into the four down game. The other thing I think any expansion into the US would require is a stadium that could properly hold a Canadian sized field. I don't think the CFL wants to play on a field that isn't the regulation size, as they did with US expansion. Essentially, any US ownership group would be required to meet CFL rules to have a team. The league isn't going to bend over backward for them again.
I think the only plausible site for CFL expansion is Buffalo if the Bills moved. However, that is only possible if Ralph Wilson Stadium can accommodate a proper CFL field. If the Bills stay put, then the only CFL expansion you will see is within Canada. For some reason Ottawa is the front runner (though I question why?) and Quebec City is number two. With the renos the Universite du Laval is doing to PEPS, coupled with the condemned stadium in Ottawa, Quebec City may have a team sooner than planned. Apparently PEPS will be up to 25,000 capacity with proper facilities in time for the fall. So I'd expect to see a team in Quebec City in the next 3 or 4 years.
...and I highly doubt Ralph Wilson can accomodate the Canadian dimensions.
None of the MLS parks can. They're selling point is intimacy. No 20-yard endzones.
Didn't the CFL occupy at least three American stadia with running tracks? That's the only way it worked down here, except none of them really worked... Baltimore sold tickets, little else did.
...and I highly doubt Ralph Wilson can accomodate the Canadian dimensions.
None of the MLS parks can. They're selling point is intimacy. No 20-yard endzones.
Didn't the CFL occupy at least three American stadia with running tracks? That's the only way it worked down here, except none of them really worked... Baltimore sold tickets, little else did.
I don't believe any of the US stadiums in the CFL had a proper field. The closest seems to me was the Alamodome in San Antonio which had a 110 yard field with 15 yard end zones. The rest had tiny end zones to accommodate for the 110 yard field. In fact, one of the teams did not even have a 110 yard field, they simply had a "55" painted at the US 45 yard line on one side.
But in the CIS (Canadian NCAA) some schools do have a running track that makes up part of the end zone. In fact, at the University of Manitoba, University Stadium's end zones are entirely track. http://maps.google.ca/maps?f=q&hl=en...&t=h&z=17&om=0
That's the Google Earth image of it. So in theory if any of the MLS stadiums or any other stadiums have enough track, the field could fit. However, to hear the CIS players talk about University Stadium, scoring TDs are not a pleasant experience.