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By Sam Farmer/Los Angeles Times
The NFL’s meandering road back to the nation’s second-largest market wound through Chicago on Tuesday, with team owners hearing the competing Los Angeles stadium pitches for the first time.
The league that goes to great lengths to avoid pitting owner against owner - revenue sharing, salary cap, and cross-ownership rules that preclude owners from fighting over the sports dollar in the same cities - is now bracing for a clash of the titans.
“I guess you could use the metaphor of musical chairs, and there’s a bit of that going on,” said Steve Tisch, co-owner of the New York Giants and a longtime LA resident. “The home (markets) haven’t made their presentations to their respective clubs, so that’s still a bit of a moving target. The presentations made today were really well done.”
St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke is proposing a stadium in Inglewood. San Diego Chargers owner Dean Spanos and Oakland Raiders owner Mark Davis are backing a competing project in Carson. At most, one stadium will be built. Los Angeles will not have three teams. In the current configuration, one and perhaps two teams will be sent back to their current markets, tail firmly between legs.
“Those are the circumstances as they are,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said. “You take a risk when you file for relocation as to whether that will be approved. Those are the stakes that each club understands.”
Tisch said the NFL has “a tremendous sensitivity” to the possibility that one or more of the competing clubs could be damaged in the process of applying for relocation, if that application is denied.
“At some point that’s going to be inevitable,” he said. “I think Roger has thought about it, the L.A. stadium committee has thought about it, and though we’re not ready to cross that bridge yet, it is something that at the appropriate time it will be handled very sensitively.”
By his estimate, Tisch said the likelihood of at least one team playing in LA by 2016 is “better than 50-50.”
If the NFL isn’t careful, this could be the biggest battle royal among owners since the messy revenue-sharing fight 10 years ago. Asked if this is a delicate situation, Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam said, “Yes, I think it is. We’re all partners and want things to work out best for the league and individual franchises. The positive is, we have good opportunities in L.A. and we’ve got two very viable stadium options. There’s still work to be done, but I think it bodes well for the NFL.”
The presentations took place in private, with owners attending the one-day meeting without their typical entourage of executives. Most were unwilling to share more than the bare-bones facts of the pitches. The Chargers and Raiders presented for a half-hour, with Carmen Policy _ former president of the San Francisco 49ers and Browns - doing most of the talking. He fielded three questions from the owners but said they appeared enthusiastic and attentive.
Policy said a Carson stadium “works for California, it certainly works for the Los Angeles market, and now it works for the two teams that are playing in the most dilapidated and terrible stadiums in the league. These facilities predated Candlestick Park in terms of facilitating football, and Candlestick today is rubble and dust.”
He called a joint Chargers-Raiders stadium “a silver-bullet solution” for the “California dilemma.”
“And you’re not only curing the California dilemma, but you’re curing it with California teams,” Policy said. “These teams were born and bred in California. They’ve always been in California. They never left California.”
Although his colleagues won’t say it publicly, Spanos has the strongest backing of the three relocation-minded owners. The league is particularly interested in protecting him, in part because he has been the most thorough in searching for a stadium solution in his current market.
Many owners believe that Kroenke has the better location and stadium plan, and that could ultimately tip the scales in his favor, even if he’s less popular among his peers than Spanos. The biggest issue in allowing Kroenke to relocate is St. Louis has done the most of the three home markets to hang onto its team. The NFL would be reluctant to leave public money on the table, particularly because that’s so hard to come by in California.
Kroenke and Rams officials almost never speak publicly about their project, so top executive Kevin Demoff drew a large crowd of reporters and TV cameras for the most generic of statements.
“We made a presentation that we thought would help the owners better understand our project,” said Demoff, revealing little more than that.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell
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