San Francisco Chronicle

New league entertaini­ng, intriguing

- By Barry Wilner Barry Wilner is an Associated Press writer.

There clearly is an appetite in America for more football. Why else would the NFL combine, draft and minicamps get almost as much attention as regular-season or even playoff games in other sports?

There also is quite the void once the Super Bowl is over and the next NFL games to pay attention to — if you really care about the exhibition schedule — begin in August.

What the Alliance of American Football presented to America in its debut weekend was impressive. Well, impressive enough to warrant continued attention and even anticipati­on for the remaining 2½ months of its initial season.

“We’re feeling pretty good this morning,” Alliance co-founder Charlie Ebersol said Monday. “We’re pleasantly surprised. One of the things I said a lot in March last year was, no matter what happened on opening day, with ratings and attendance, was good football. Two things that really surprised us were the quality of play across all four games, and the adoption of our digital platform. The engagement numbers were so far beyond anything we could have expected.

“We were pleasantly surprised that people not only wanted to see football in the alternativ­e, but they were looking for a new way to engage with it. We started to scratch that itch a little bit.”

Ebersol and Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian, who is in charge of the overall football operations, worked only nine months to get the Alliance rolling. That might seem like a rush job, but the product on the field, though sloppy at times and definitely slower than the NFL brand, was watchable. In fact, it was entertaini­ng for the most part, and the possibilit­ies for the league and its players are intriguing.

Enough of the country felt that way, too: A 2.1 rating and 4.0 share on CBS on Saturday night for San Diego at San Antonio should not be scoffed at, particular­ly when an NBA game on ABC had a similar audience. Digital participat­ion, as Ebersol noted, was strong. Soon, betting lines will make their way out of Las Vegas.

The Alliance, which has eight teams — the others are in Birmingham, Memphis, Orlando, Atlanta, Salt Lake City and Phoenix — isn’t fooling itself or trying to fool fans with the caliber of play. The nation’s best football players nearly all are in the NFL. Ebersol and Polian do not claim otherwise.

What they espouse, wisely and accurately, is that there are hundreds of other quality players still seeking their shots at the big time. So if the Alliance is helping develop a pipeline of talent for the NFL, that’s a valuable thing.

Viewers and fans at the stadiums should recognize that, and see the Alliance players for what they are: men eager to state their case as football players. They all believe the next step is the NFL, and that this three-month season can catapult them there.

“It was the extraordin­ary effort that stands out, which would have been expected,” Polian said.

 ?? Tom Reel / San Antonio Express-News ?? San Antonio’s Shaan Washington knocks the helmet off San Diego Fleet quarterbac­k Mike Bercovici. The eight-team league pays players about $75,000.
Tom Reel / San Antonio Express-News San Antonio’s Shaan Washington knocks the helmet off San Diego Fleet quarterbac­k Mike Bercovici. The eight-team league pays players about $75,000.

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