USA TODAY US Edition

NFL GAINING GROUND ABROAD The Giants’ Eli Manning (10) drops back Sunday vs. the Rams at packed Twickenham Stadium.

Efforts in England have establishe­d solid following

- Martin Rogers mjrogers@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW REPORTER MARTIN ROGERS @mrogersUSA­T for sports news and commentary.

Game 16 of the NFL’s bold crusade beyond its own borders arrived in London on Sunday, making this as good a time as any to take a quick look at what we have learned from the ongoing experiment to give America’s game an English twist.

Needless to say, football hasn’t conquered Britain enough to divert attention from its own passion: football (of the round ball variety). Even after all these visits, some of those who packed into Twickenham Stadium on Sunday afternoon weren’t quite sure what was going on, perplexed by such oddities as the game stopping every couple of minutes and the pitch — sorry, field — being invaded by cheerleade­rs with regularity.

Los Angeles Rams owner Stan Kroenke confidentl­y asserted this year that his franchise was poised to become not just the team of London but of the global NFL audience. It must have been somewhat disappoint­ing then to see the number of Rams supporters at the home of rugby outnumbere­d by those in New York Giants gear. And the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, New England Patriots, Pittsburgh Steelers, Miami Dol- phins and pretty much every other NFL team you can think of. Perhaps it is Kroenke’s loss, but it might be a victory for other owners.

Even so, maybe there is a little NFL fatigue going on in the United Kingdom, which got sick of that other great omnipotent bu- reaucratic entity, the European Union, and kicked it out in a contentiou­s vote during the summer.

Media coverage in England was scant ahead of this, the second of three games in a four-week span across the capital. The Sun, Britain’s most-read publicatio­n, carried just 100 words ahead of the game, focusing on Rams tight end Lance Kendricks discussing the thrill of swapping St. Louis for Tinseltown and — fortunatel­y for NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell and the Giants — ignoring the domestic abuse saga of kicker Josh Brown.

But while the matchup of a pair of 3-3 teams might not have been buzzing on the lips of every Londoner, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that enough of them turned up to fill up one of Europe’s largest and most impressive stadiums.

BBC2, a free-to-air national broadcaste­r, piped the game live, free of charge and without commercial­s (imagine that) into millions of British living rooms.

To be fair to those in the stadium, the uninitiate­d were far from the majority. Plenty of those in attendance knew when to cheer, when to stand, when to duck out for a beer to beat the lines.

Yes, there is an NFL culture here, not a rabid, overwhelmi­ng one big enough to be considered a social movement. But it is establishe­d, it is committed, and, unless Goodell and his band of global thinkers suddenly change tack, it is here to stay.

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ??
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States