Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. leagues will soon be internatio­nal

- PAUL NEWBERRY

An NFL team in London? Count on it.

An NBA franchise in Mexico City? Yep, that’s coming too.

What was once a pipe dream — major-league teams based in cities outside the United States and Canada — is now just a matter of time. The aforementi­oned cities are the ones most likely to break through first, but others will surely follow when everyone sees how much potential revenue is there for the taking.

“The market is saturated in the U.S.,” said Gil Fried, a professor and chair of sports management at the University of New Haven. “They need to find new markets.”

The NFL has been trying for years to make inroads in Europe — especially London — and those efforts were turned up to full blast by revelation­s that Jacksonvil­le Jaguars owner Shahid Khan is attempting to buy Wembley Stadium, a 90,000seat, state-of-the-art venue known the world over.

Khan brushed off the obvious speculatio­n that this is the first step toward moving the Jaguars to London — where they already have been playing “home” games since 2013 — but didn’t exactly provide a resounding vote of confidence for Jacksonvil­le, one of the smallest markets in the NFL.

“The first thing you want with certainty is you want a venue,” he said. “And this gives us a stadium solution, for us or anyone else.”

In other words, better get used to calling his team the London Jaguars.

The NBA, which last expanded in 2004, is looking to get the jump on Mexico City, a sprawling metropolis of more than 20 million people that opened an NBA-ready arena in 2012.

That facility hosted a pair of NBA regular-season games each of the last two seasons, drawing an average of more than 20,000 fans.

“You can feel it, you can smell it, you can breathe it in the streets,” said Gilberto Hernández, president of the Mexican Basketball Federation. “They’re just craving basketball.”

Of course, there are a number of challenges that must be addressed before internatio­nal expansion becomes a reality — especially so for Mexico City, which is 7,350 feet above sea level (more than 2,000 feet higher than Denver), is plagued by crime and economic-disparity issues, and might have trouble signing top players who are reluctant to step outside their cultural comfort zone.

But the appeal is enormous. “It’s the largest city in the Western Hemisphere,” NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said. “It’s part of a 130 million-person country. There’s a very strong, passionate Mexican-American fan base in the United States. This is also a potential gateway for all of Latin America.”

The enormous travel times between North America and either Europe or Asia remain the biggest obstacle to adding teams in those markets. Unless some sort of supersonic transporta­tion becomes available, it would simply be too difficult to incorporat­e such faraway cities as London and Tokyo into an 82-game schedule, which requires teams to play games all through the week and sometimes on back-to-back days.

Also working against European expansion: the lack of U.S.-quality arenas (even the most modern facilities generally lack the size and amenities to generate as much revenue as their American counterpar­ts) and establishe­d basketball leagues in many countries would surely object to the NBA coming in to steal their limelight.

For the NFL, the challenges aren’t nearly so daunting, and the potential rewards could be even greater for a league that has faced declining TV ratings and lots of bad publicity about the devastatin­g physical toll on its players.

There are no major pro football leagues in Europe. Teams play only once a week, generally on Sunday, and the entire regular-season schedule is just 16 games. A team in London would have to make the cross-Atlantic trek no more than eight times a year, and the demands could be lessened by scheduling back-to-back road games, halving the number of long-range roundtrips.

Travel would not be a concern for a Mexican team. The NBA and NFL, along with Major League Baseball, have all played regular-season games south of the border.

The NBA is leading the way for launching a team in Mexico. Silver wants to put a G League developmen­t team in Mexico City, testing the waters for a possible NBA franchise.

“As we look down the road, frankly, to see whether there can be an opportunit­y to even dream about an NBA franchise here in Mexico City, we believe it makes sense as a first step to have a developmen­t league team here to work out some of the issues, to better understand what it would mean to have a team in Mexico,” Silver said.

There are still plenty of questions to answer, that’s for sure. But one is crystal clear.

Are U.S. leagues going internatio­nal?

No doubt about it.

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