The Daily Courier

Oddsmaker says it’s Toronto’s time for NFL

-

It could take another 10 years but Adam Thompson firmly believes Toronto’s time for an NFL expansion franchise is coming.

Thompson is a handicappe­r/oddsmaker for Bookies.com, an American-based site that offers bettors a guide to legal sports-betting in Canada and the U.S. And on Wednesday, Thompson listed Toronto as a 5-1 fourth choice as the next city that will get an NFL expansion club in the coming years.

“Toronto is already a major league city,” Thompson said. “It has proven it can host a major American profession­al sport, which is one of many reasons why Toronto makes a lot of sense (for NFL).

“Everyone has talked it (NFL expansion) is going to happen but I’ve never seen any real numbers as to when. I’d bet within 10 years there’s at least 36 teams, if not more. I think Toronto will eventually get a team . . . . I think Toronto’s time is coming.”

Thompson listed London as the favourite at just over 2-1 odds. Mexico (3.5-1) and St, Louis (4.5-1) were next, followed by Toronto. Rounding out the eight cities listed were San Antonio (8-1), San Diego and Salt Lake City (both 13-1) and Austin, Tex. (15-1).

Recently, Dallas mayor Eric Johnson said his city, which already has the Dallas Cowboys, was ready for an NFL expansion franchise. The Rams left St. Louis after the 2015 season and litigation is ongoing. But Thompson said the thought is a final agreement will include an expansion team.

“The NFL is at 32 teams and there’s a lot of talk that eventually, ultimately, it wants to get to 40 teams and the NFL has made it clear it wants to expand internatio­nally,” Thompson said. “London is the sexy pick, Mexico City is just a huge mega market . . . but logistical­ly it (Toronto) would be way easier than those other two.

“It’s the biggest market in the U.S. and Canada that doesn’t have a team right now and from that regard it would just be easier to just start in Toronto, which has hosted NFL games and probably has a thirst for the NFL built in already.”

Toronto has long been mentioned as a possible landing spot for an NFL expansion franchise. The city has hosted a number of league games at Rogers Centre and in 2014 a group that included Larry Tanenbaum, chairman of Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainm­ent and rocker Jon Bon Jovi put in an unsuccessf­ul bid to own the Buffalo Bills.

Two major challenges for a group looking to bring the NFL to Toronto would be money and a stadium.

First of all, the projected cost of an NFL expansion franchise would exceed US$2 billion (over $2.6 billion in Canadian funds). Then there’d be the matter of building a compatible stadium as Rogers Centre can seat between 45,000 to 55,000 for football.

By comparison, NFL stadiums traditiona­lly seat at least 60,000 fans. AT&T Stadium, the Cowboys’ home, has the highest capacity of any NFL stadium with a peak capacity exceeding 100,000 spectators.

Earlier this year, the Bills reached an agreement with new York State and Erie County to build a US$1.4 billion ($1.8 billion Canadian) open-air stadium in Orchard Park, N.Y., that’s set to be completed in 2026.

“Rogers Centre is probably not going to be the long-term home of any NFL team,” Thompson said. “But I think it could be so long as there was the promise of a future stadium that’s going to start to get built once the ink gets dry.

“It (price of franchise) is a lot of money but when the Bills were for sale, Toronto found over $1 billion and that was a while ago to make it work.”

Getting all three levels of government — federal, provincial and municipal — to help pay for a new NFL stadium in Toronto would be a huge undertakin­g.

Another challenge would be the potential impact a Toronto NFL franchise would have on Buffalo. NFL commission­er Roger Goodell is a native of Jamestown, N.Y., and has said he wants the Bills to be solid in Buffalo.

“I think that would be the one drawback, that Toronto is considered as kind of a Buffalo area, part of Buffalo’s market,” Thompson said. “But New York has two teams (Giants and Jets), Chicago is close to a couple of franchises and Florida has (three), so I think Toronto and Buffalo could coexist.

“But that’s probably the one hurdle that the NFL needs convincing on when it comes to Toronto.”

There’d also be the matter of the NFL’s impact upon the CFL, which is headquarte­red in Toronto and has the Argonauts in the city.

Goodell has also been very public in the NFL’s support for the CFL.

“The NFL has proven time and again, on and off the field, that it can do whatever it wants and there’s really little long-term blowback in anything,” Thompson said.

 ?? ?? The Associated Press
Fans enter the Rogers Centre before the Buffalo Bills play the Atlanta Falcons in NFL action in Toronto, on Dec. 1, 2013.
The Associated Press Fans enter the Rogers Centre before the Buffalo Bills play the Atlanta Falcons in NFL action in Toronto, on Dec. 1, 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada