NFL to Make Short-Lived Visit to Mexico
Don’t expect the NFL to stick around Mexico very long after Sunday’s game between the Arizona Cardinals and San Francisco 49ers, the first regular-season game played outside the United States.
NFL Mexico, which oversees the sport in this country, says it has no plans to push for a team any time soon. It appears content to follow the lead of the NBA and major league baseball, which played games that counted in Mexico in years past but haven’t seriously considered sanctioning Mexican franchises.
“A franchise in Mexico, it’s not a priority for the short or medium term,” said Geraldine Gonzalez of the league’s Mexico City office. “It’s not so viable.”
NFL surveys say 20 million Mexicans, a little less than one in five, are fans of the league.
Still, Gonzalez said the fact that few play football has prohibited a sports culture from forming around homegrown talent. Factor in concerns about security, logistical difficulties and whether fans can afford ticket prices, and an NFL team here starts to look about as likely as Giants Stadium hosting Mexican cockfights.
“There are a number of communities in the United States that have raised their hands and said, ‘We are ready for a franchise,’ including Los Angeles,” Gonzalez said. “The league will first look out for its interests within the United States.”
The NFL is not alone. The northern city of Monterrey hosted baseball in 1999 and a three-game series between the San Diego Padres and New York Mets in 1996. But a bid to bring the Montreal Expos there part time, instead of playing in Puerto Rico, fizzled in 2003.
NBA commissioner David Stern has mentioned Mexico City as a possible site for an expansion franchise, and the Houston Rockets beat the Dallas Mavericks 108-106 here on Dec. 6, 1997. But the league has not been back for a regular-season contest.
Paul Swangard, managing director of the University of Oregon’s Warsaw Sports Management Center, said Mexico’s inability to provide would-be franchises with modern stadiums including luxury boxes and other lucrative perks have helped scare away U.S. leagues.
Source: abcnews.go.com
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