Looks like the NFL will have some new competition

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  • bigboydan
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 08-10-05
    • 55420

    #1
    Looks like the NFL will have some new competition
    The USFL and XFL both failed and now Hambrecht wants to take a crack at it.

    Hambrecht Plans Football League for Non-NFL Cities (Update1)

    By Aaron Kuriloff

    May 30 (Bloomberg) -- WR Hambrecht & Co. Chairman Bill Hambrecht plans to form a professional football league in North American cities where there are no National Football League teams.

    The United Football League would require a $30 million investment for each of eight initial franchises, and would sell shares in its teams that would be traded publicly, league spokesman Brian Fisher said. He declined to comment on other financial details.

    The 32-team NFL, which generates the highest television ratings of any U.S. sport, has crushed competitors before. Since agreeing to merge with the American Football League in 1966, three other challengers have folded: The World Football League played a full season in 1974 before shutting down the next year; the United States Football League lasted from 1983 to 1986; and the XFL closed in 2001 after one season.

    ``In can be very costly to penetrate this space,'' said David Carter, executive director of the University of Southern California Sports Business Institute.

    Carter said franchise owners might have to accept several years of losses before the league established itself.

    NFL Revenue

    NFL spokesman Greg Aiello declined to comment. The league had revenue of about $6 billion last year, $3.73 billion from television alone. Mario Williams, the first pick in the league's 2006 draft, signed a six-year, $54 million contract that guaranteed him $26.5 million -- almost enough to buy a team in the new league. The rookie minimum salary last season was $275,000.

    Hambrecht, 71, who started his securities company in 1998, is founding the league with Tim Armstrong, vice president of advertising sales for Google Inc., and has hired Bill Daugherty, founder of Interactive Search Holdings and a former National Basketball Association vice president, Fisher said.

    Hambrecht helped persuade Google to use an Internet-based auction for its initial stock sale in 2004, rather than relying on banks to find buyers.

    The league, which hasn't decided where to locate teams, would begin play in August 2008 using rules similar to those in college and professional football. The first owner of a franchise is Mark Cuban, who owns the Dallas Mavericks of the NBA, Fisher said. The league would not compete with the NFL for top players, rather try to draw borderline players.

    Brad Blank, the Boston-based agent whose clients include New England Patriots linebacker Tedy Bruschi and Tennessee Titans receiver David Givens, said he would advise clients to consider a new league if the salaries were high enough to justify the physical risks of playing football.

    ``These days, I don't suggest someone goes out and does that for $25,000,'' he said.

    The formation of the new league was first reported on the New York Times' Web site this morning.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Aaron Kuriloff in New York at akuriloff@bloomberg.net .
    Last Updated: May 30, 2007 17:41 EDT
  • WWTSblows
    SBR High Roller
    • 10-14-06
    • 161

    #2
    Definitely something I won't be investing in.
    Comment
    • BigBollocks
      SBR MVP
      • 06-11-06
      • 2045

      #3
      The most obvious current non-NFL cities off the top of my head to put teams in would be San Antonio (they sold out virtually every game when the Saints played there), Memphis, Birmingham, OKC, LA, Albuquerque, Portland, and Honolulu (think Vegas would be a complete bust).

      That said I think the league is doomed to fail like the other leagues before it...
      Comment
      • abacus30
        SBR Sharp
        • 03-23-07
        • 336

        #4
        add Columbus to the list too - not many know it, but it is the biggest city in Ohio.
        Comment
        • BigBollocks
          SBR MVP
          • 06-11-06
          • 2045

          #5
          Nice addition abacus as Columbus certainly loves football. The only thing that has held it back from professional sports teams in the past is people questioning if Ohio can maintain three professional teams, as well as Cincinnati and Cleveland owners blocking moves for obvious reasons...
          Comment
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