Imperial Valley Press

Fans or not, NFL braces for new stadium feel, sudden changes

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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Jerry Jones won’t put a number on the attendance for the Dallas Cowboys’ home opener until the crowd is announced later this month at AT&T Stadium.

The owner of the Cowboys also hopes the 80,000- seat venue with standing room space that pushes capacity past 90,000 will be closer to full as the pandemic- altered NFL season goes on.

All of which is to say the league’s clubs are preparing for a rapidly changing environmen­t while accepting the bottom-line notion that playing games with limited numbers of fans or none at all will affect revenues in 2020.

“You think about the lost revenue that these teams have across the board with no fans in the building,” said Bill Rhoda, president of global planning for Legends, a stadium operations company co-owned by the Cowboys and New York Yankees.

“And it goes from tickets to the concession­s, to the merchandis­e to the game, to the lack of private suites being used, which then has an impact on sponsorshi­ps. So there is a trickle-down effect that this virus has had on the industry as a whole.”

Specifics are hard to get because clubs don’t disclose or discuss them. According to 2018 figures estimated by Forbes magazine, the Cowboys pulled about two-thirds of their $950 million in revenue from the stadium.

While America’s Team figures to take one of the biggest hits in stadium revenue, even with fans on hand while other teams don’t allow them, the Cowboys also are a symbol of the NFL at large — they should be fine in the long term.

“The NFL is a juggernaut,” said David Steinberg, co-founder of Zeta Global, a company that analyzes advertisin­g data for pro sports teams. “Other than maybe European (soccer), there’s no other league really globally like that. So I think that they are going to not just survive this. I think they will thrive in it.”

The Green Bay Packers offer the only glimpse at NFL finances as a publicly owned team. Even with no fans all season, CEO Mark Murphy says the Packers can cover player costs with national revenue highlighte­d by media rights, which is about two-thirds of the club’s overall revenue. Murphy also says the Packers have about $400 million in reserve.

Most of the the league’s 32 teams will start the season without fans. Both Los Angeles teams have announced plans to follow the model started by Korean baseball and adopted by Major League Baseball — fan cutouts in the seats when the new SoFi Stadium opens. Proceeds are going to charity.

The league is allowing teams to sell sponsorshi­ps on tarps covering seats in the lower bowl between the 30-yard lines, capped at 16 spots. The end zone tarps are reserved for sponsors of both the club and the league.

“Creative thinking is going to win here,” said Mark Reino, CEO of Merit Mile, a Boca Raton, Florida- based advertisin­g, PR and sports marketing agency. “Maybe it’s a little cheeky, sometimes those cheeky ideas really win out in terms of maintainin­g loyalty.”

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