The Columbus Dispatch

NFL to choose German host city

- Ken Maguire

LONDON – The NFL has returned to London with the Atlanta Falcons facing the New York Jets on Sunday but the league is just as focused on its next internatio­nal destinatio­n: Germany.

Brett Gosper, NFL Head of UK and Europe, said they are finalizing their short list of German cities to host a game as early as next season.

The opening of an office in Germany is “reasonably imminent,” he added, as is the hiring of a general manager there as the league expands in Europe, with France and Spain also in its sights.

Eight cities in Germany expressed interest in becoming a partner city to host a regular-season game, he said. The NFL announced a bidding process in June.

“We will whittle down to three and we’re hoping we’ll be able to announce something in the next week or two,” Gosper said.

The announceme­nt could coincide with NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell’s expected trip to London during the Internatio­nal Series.

After the Falcons face the Jets on Sunday, the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars play the Miami Dolphins a week later. Both games will be held at the stadium of Premier League soccer team Tottenham.

Gosper declined to identify the likely German finalists but said bidders might come to London on an “observer program” for the Jags-dolphins game.

“They’re in the final bid,” he said. “There’s some sensitivit­y on their side in particular because they have to go through their own appropriat­e decision making. We’ve made sure these cities formed a consortium so it will be a partnershi­p between the region, the city, the owner of the stadium – which in most cases is a Bundesliga football club.”

A regular-season game in Germany seems a question of when, not if, with a decision expected by the end of the year. He said the “only hesitation” on 2022 would be scheduling conflicts with soccer’s World Cup, which begins next November in Qatar.

“If we can solve those, then it could be ‘22. Certainly no later than ‘23,” he said.

A suitable stadium is the biggest factor, followed by ease of travel. Tottenham’s state-of-the-art facility was built to host both soccer and NFL games with capacity seating of 62,850.

The cities of Dortmund, Berlin, Gelsenkirc­hen, and Stuttgart each have a stadium – and Munich has two – capable of holding at least 60,000 fans, with soccer club Borussia Dortmund’s the largest at just over 81,000.

Sky Sports, which has the broadcasti­ng rights for the NFL in Britain, earlier reported that Munich and Dusseldorf expressed interest but that Berlin did not, due to laws on commercial promotions.

It’s not just about size. Gosper said they’re looking for a “deeper relationsh­ip than just a game once a year,” citing grassroots partnershi­ps and an NFL Academy.

Germany, which has increasing­ly produced athletes for U.S. college football programs, had five teams at various times in the former World League/nfl Europe/nfl Europa.

A league office in Germany is upcoming.

“It’s reasonably imminent because we’re at the intense phase of a search for a general manager. Where we decide that would be set up might depend on where we land on a possible game in Germany,” said Gosper, the Australian former CEO of World Rugby.

City of light? After Germany, NFL analysis has shown that France would be the next logical European host.

“It would seem that France is probably the third market in that sense in the analysis that we’ve done, followed by Spain,” Gosper said. “The Nordics are very strong too, with a smaller population base.”

Those markets “are on a high growth path now, in terms of viewership, in terms of increased fans,” he said.

London: The NFL has played 28 regular-season games in London from 2007-19. None were played in the city in 2020 – when four were scheduled – because of the pandemic.

There are seven years left on Tottenham’s 10-year contract to host two NFL games annually, Gosper said.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/AP ?? Fans arrive at Wembley Stadium before a 2014 NFL game between the Falcons and the Lions in London.
MATT DUNHAM/AP Fans arrive at Wembley Stadium before a 2014 NFL game between the Falcons and the Lions in London.

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