This is my first
blog, so please let me know how I did!
One of the saddest
commentaries in U.S. sports is how the city of Los Angeles, the nation's second-largest television
market, doesn’t have a franchise in the NFL. Abandoned by both the Rams and the
Raiders in 1994, the city of Los Angeles and the NFL have been going in circles ever
since. Every week, it seems, a report appears about a new stadium proposal; the
L.A. Coliseum will be renovated, Chavez Ravine is an option or Anaheim is in the running. The NFL will fly
executives to Los
Angeles
to scout out sites, announce that none meet their criteria and the game begins
again.
Two pro sports
franchises leaving town the same year should have caused an uproar. When Cleveland lost the Browns to Baltimore, owner Art Modell was vilified and received
death threats. When the Raiders and Rams departed in 1994, Los Angelinos yawned
before going surfing. To add insult to injury, there was recent news of Canadian
Football League officials talking about the possibility of an NFL team moving
to Canada. CANADA?! While the NFL has no current plans for
expansion, several existing teams are believed to be potential candidates for
relocation, including the Buffalo Bills, Minnesota Vikings, Jacksonville Jaguars
and New Orleans Saints.
Of those
franchises, the Bills seem most likely to move in the short-term; given that
89-year-old owner Ralph Wilson has publicly declared the team will be sold to
the highest bidder after his death. The Buffalo market will be too small to generate the
revenue needed to offset an NFL franchise purchased for current value. While
the NFL insists putting a team in Los Angeles is its top priority, why are we talking
about Canada?
What team wouldn’t
want to relocate to Los
Angeles?
L.A. offers plenty of advantages; the region is
home to a number of Fortune 500 companies, the population of Los Angeles County alone tops 10 million, and the weather is
generally good year-round.
In my opinion, there are two primary reasons L.A. doesn't have an NFL team. First, the
taxpayers are being asked to pay for a multi-million dollar stadium. Why should
the people of any city be forced to pay for stadiums when the people of the
city will receive no benefit from the team's presence? Let's see, we pay
for the stadiums, then they charge us anywhere between $100-$200 bucks a
seat. So the owners get a free stadium then get to charge the people who
paid for the stadium outrageous amounts of money to watch games in the stadium
they paid for? Uhhh…I don’t think so! Second, I think the NFL has been
using Los
Angeles
as a bargaining chip to help other franchises get new stadium deals. In the
event a franchise isn’t satisfied with their current stadium lease, and what
team is, the owner(s) can say, “Well, I’ll just have to look elsewhere if I
can’t get a new stadium.” And where is the first place they’ll look? Yep. L.A.
The stories will
continue to be posted, but the bottom line is this: Los Angeles is as close to landing an NFL team as Paris
Hilton is to having a clean driving record.
Thanks for reading and please post comments. I’ll get back to you right away!
Hi everyone! My name is Catrina, and I'm a student at Long Beach State University in Long Beach, California. I work part-time for the Port of Long Beach and a very nice man I speak to everyday told me about his blog on Fox. I LOVE sports and he suggested I write a blog too.
I know I look like the typical California girl, but I'm not stuck-up, shallow or most importantly, stupid. I love the Dodgers, Lakers and Galaxy. Since we don't have a football team in L.A. (Boo NFL!), I cheer for the Chargers.