The Denver Post

Owners present pitches for Los Angeles stadiums

- By Jay Cohen

schaumburg, ill.» Three NFL teams. Billions of dollars in play. One big opportunit­y.

A whole lot more than California dreamin’ on a warm summer day.

NFL owners met in suburban Chicago on Tuesday to hear more about moving at least one team to the Los Angeles market. The San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders presented a proposal for a stadium in Carson that includes eightplus acres of rent-free land for the league to use as it sees fit, and St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke also talked about his plan for a facility in Inglewood.

While commission­er Roger Goodell said no voting of any kind occurred at the meeting, it was clear the momentum was rolling toward at least one relocated team in the Los Angeles area possibly as soon as the 2016 season.

“I feel the likelihood is good,” New York Giants owner Steve Tisch said. “I think it’s better than 50-50.”

The traditiona­l window for applying for relocation runs from Jan. 1 to Feb. 15, but Goodell said that timeline could be moved up or tightened. He also felt the league would decide on a relocation fee this fall.

Los Angeles hasn’t had an NFL team since the Rams and Raiders departed after the 1994 season. Now they want to resume their L.A. story, and the Chargers are looking to leave the city they’ve called home since 1961.

At stake is one of the country’s largest markets, and the NFL is focused on a long-term solution.

“That’s the key issue for us, making sure that whatever we ultimately decide as a membership, that we have the ability to be successful in Los Angeles for the long term,” Goodell said, “and that’s why we spent the last two decades trying to come up with a solution that we felt would provide that kind of foundation.”

The high-stakes game of musical chairs probably will send at least one team back to a market it tried to leave, but Goodell said the teams know the risk.

“Those are the circumstan­ces as they are,” he said. “You take a risk if you file for relocation of whether it’ll be approved.”

The Chargers and Raiders, longtime AFC West rivals, are pushing a shared $1.7 billion venue involving about 170 acres in Carson, a city of 93,000 people south of downtown Los Angeles. Owners Dean Spanos of the Chargers and Mark Davis of the Raiders spoke during their 30-minute presentati­on at the meetings, and Carmen Policy, a former 49ers executive who was hired to help oversee the project, said the group touted the transporta­tion and location advantages of its proposed site, and the history of the teams.

“It cures the California dilemma, and you’re not only curing the California dilemma, but you’re curing it with California teams,” Policy said. “These teams have been born and bred in California. They never left California. They’ve always been in California.”

Davis said he talked about the progress that the group had made over the past six months, and he thought the presentati­on went well.

“You never know,” Davis said.

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