Tottenham Releases Images of New Stadium

Check out the images of London's newest stadium to host NFL games from 2018

NFL International Series

Catch up on the latest results and fixtures from the NFL in London

NFL Shop Europe

Get the latest merchandise for your team this side of the Atlantic

Jacksonville Jaguars UK Fan Club

With rapidly growing support, join the Union Jax and support the team

The Challenges Ahead

We break down the difficulties facing a future NFL franchise in London

Monday, 19 October 2015

Buffalo Bills Arrive In London

The Buffalo Bills have arrived in London ahead of their regular season game this Sunday against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

After a defeat to the Cincinnati Bengals, the Bills will be looking to turn things around at Wembley Stadium, despite losing out on Wide Receivers, Percy Harvin and Sammy Watkins, to injury. The Bills are already without their Quarter Back, Tyrod Taylor, and Running Back, Karlos Williams, also due to injury.

They will face a tough matchup against the Jacksonville Jaguars, who have made London their unofficial "second home", after club owner, Shahid Khan, promised to commit them to a regular season game in London for 4 years in 2012.

London's Regent Street will also be reserved especially for the event on Saturday, becoming a traffic free zone for fan events and pre-game festivities.

Sunday, 18 October 2015

NFL Wembley Seven Years Away?

Tottenham fan Mark Waller is desperate to get his team into Wembley Stadium, but not just as a temporary home while the builders are in.

An Englishman in the National Football League's New York headquarters, Waller will have failed as the league's head of international expansion if he has not got an American football team sharing the national stadium with the England football team by 2021.

Waller - born in Kenya, Welsh mum, English dad, school in Wales, university in England, "career all over the place" - was speaking in a hotel about 20 minutes' drive from Wembley, 48 hours before the NFL stages its ninth game there since 2007, when Oakland Raiders take on Miami Dolphins on Sunday.

Every single one of those "International Series" games has sold out - bar Chicago's win over Tampa in 2011 when tickets went on sale late because of the NFL lock-out and the attendance was 76,981. And having coyly dipped a toe in the water with one game a season for six years, the league tried two last year, before climbing in up to the thighs with three this season.

A quarter of million tickets have been sold for this year's games, with more than 33,000 people buying a mini-season ticket for all three. Nine out of 10 tickets have been bought by people who live within three hours' travel of London.

Whether all of those will remain in British hands is debatable: StubHub, the online ticket exchange, says sales for Sunday's game are up nearly 20% on the equivalent game last year. But when you factor in this week's announcement that Sky Sports has agreed to show five NFL games a week from next season, plus the improving viewing figures and participation rates, you start to wonder 'why wait seven years?'.

"To permanently relocate an NFL team to the UK is a massive task" said Waller, not sounding remotely like somebody who thought it was too massive. "It's not like putting a team in a US city. There are a whole set of logistical implications for the players, coaches, back-office staff and so on. There are also implications for the rest of the league and issues for the stadium. We play at Wembley, England play at Wembley, so it's important for both of us that the surface holds up. So we need to test playing games over consecutive weekends, followed by an England game. And, at the moment, we give any team that comes over here the following weekend off. That is not going to be practical in the future, so we will have to look at a team playing here one week, and then back in the US a week later. So there is a lot still to be done, because any team we put here has to be competitive. It's not just about putting a team in the marketplace, that team has to be able to win the Super Bowl."

It is often all too easy to get swept along by an expert salesman's patter (and I say that with genuine respect, Waller is also the NFL's chief marketing officer) but it is important to remember just how remarkable a statement that is. It was only 16 years ago that London's last professional gridiron team folded. Gates had slumped to 6,000, although by that stage the Monarchs had been forced into a nomadic existence, each new home less regal than the last.

Ten years ago, the UK's last professional gridiron team, the Scottish Claymores, fell on its sword, too. Like dizzy teenagers, it seemed the British public had picked up American football in the 1980s and decided it was the coolest thing in the planet, only to get bored and put it down again. But that is the thing about fashion - wait long enough and it comes around again.

This time, however, the NFL is determined to reach "timeless classic" status. Which timeless classic, though? The London Chargers? Jaguars? Rams? Raiders? All four of those franchises - currently in San Diego, Jacksonville, St Louis and Oakland respectively - are on short-term leases with their existing homes, and two of those, the Jaguars and Rams, are owned by men who already own London sports "franchises", Fulham owner Shahid Khan, and Arsenal's Stan Kroenke.

But that is getting ahead of ourselves slightly, particularly as the NFL's bigger priority must surely be re-establishing a team in the second biggest city in the US, Los Angeles.

Either way, Waller was not going to give the game away. "In both markets we have focused on laying the groundwork - the stadium, the fans, the logistics," he explained. "We [at NFL HQ] have spent very little time thinking about the teams, and who goes where. That is for our owners to decide."

That said, Waller acknowledged it was "clearly a help" that some NFL owners know the British market and "media environment" better than others. And to that number you can add Manchester United's proprietors, the Glazers. Talk of them, and "soccer" in general, got me wondering if the NFL's charm offensive was a response to the sight and sound of Premier League tanks on their Astroturf.

America's favourite league - and it still is, despite a truly horrible run of self-inflicted bad press - is also the world's most profitable, with annual revenues about double the Premier League's. But the gap is closing, and our football is catching on with them, too. Waller, who as well as supporting Spurs, counts cricket and rugby among his favourite sports, denies the NFL is responding to any perceived threat from the Premier League.

"Not at all," he assured me. "We started [the International Series] before the Premier League gained its current momentum. I don't like comparing sports, but our average audience for a live game on Sky is the same as a Premier League game on NBC." This might be true in terms of share (actual Premier League audiences in the US are about four times the size of NFL games here), but our game has certainly done better in terms of extracting money from US networks than the NFL has so far here.

"Yes, it would be fair to say we're in investment mode," said Waller. "But it is hardly a loss-leader."

 It is worth noting that Waller's boss, Roger Goodell, made his feelings on the matter clear last year.
 "We've got passionate fans in the UK," said Goodell, who wants to more than double the league's revenues by 2027. "Our ownership understands that this is a market we need to be more active in."

So, enough of us seem to want it, the NFL's accountants would love it, and if the University of Hawaii's players can travel 2,500 miles and cross four time zones to play college games, surely the NFL's well-remunerated professionals can make it work, too. Over to you, agent Waller.


[Original article by Matt Slater: BBC Sport]

Monday, 12 October 2015

The Trouble With T.Y. Hilton

It's been a rough campaign for Colts Wide Receiver, T.Y. Hilton. Not only did he severely bruise his knee during the second game between the New York Jets, but also suffered a severe lack in value due to Quarter Back, Andrew Luck, missing time with a shoulder injury. From a Colts perspective, this his left them without any form of real threat at  Wide Receiver (no offence, Andre Johnson), and from a fantasy perspective, this has left owners disgruntled to say the least.

However, is a change of fortune coming?

Hilton was obviously hobbled by his ailing knee injury for a while, but knee injuries heal, as do shoulder injuries on top Quarter Backs. It is highly likely that Andrew Luck will be back for the Colts week 6 matchup against New England, and once he returns, there is very little limit to T.Y's value. The QB/WR connection both Hilton and Luck have is one of the best in the league, and it is only improving with time (Hilton has improved his receiving yards and target numbers continuously over the past three years), and with the Colts running game looking average at best, now is the time for Hilton to make a come-back and forget the bad fortunes of the first 5 weeks.

If you're a fantasy owner, hold onto Hilton. If you're a Colts fan, get ready for some serious production from 2 of the best players in the league.

Thursday, 8 October 2015

NFL Approves International Matches Until 2025

The NFL has approved a resolution to play regular-season games overseas until 2025, with some fixtures rumoured to be played in Europe as well as the United Kingdom
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Regular fixtures have been played in London since 2007. At the moment, 3 games are played at Wembley Stadium annually, but the NFL is looking to increase the number of games per year to 5 in order to further test the market across the Atlantic.

Earlier this year, the NFL signed a 10-year partnership with Tottenham Hotspur to play at least two games a season at Spurs' new stadium, which is due to open in 2018 after construction.

In a statement, the NFL also said that Wembley was "...expected to host games in future seasons. Fans in the UK have responded incredibly well to the regular-season games we have played in London since 2007. They have demanded more NFL games, and we have worked to accommodate them. We think it's time to expand our international series to other countries and respond to the growing interest in our game not only in the UK, but elsewhere around the world."

A total of 12 season games have been played at Wembley over the years, with two more to come this season - Buffalo Bills v Jacksonville Jaguars on 25th October and Detroit Lions v Kansas City Chiefs on 1st November.


Image Attribution: The London Economic

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Is Arian Foster Worth The Hype?

It was rumored during the pre-season that Texans Running Back, Arian Foster, would only miss a couple of weeks while he underwent surgery to repair a groin injury. Those rumors have proven to be true, as the star player returned to the field in his week 4 matchup against the Atlanta Falcons.

If you were smart enough to draft Foster in fantasy leagues as a late round pick-up, well played. You're now in possession of a quality Running Back with high-end value.

However, fantasy football aside, is the MVP for Houston reliable for the weeks ahead?

Lets not forget, no matter what surgery someone goes through, it takes time to heal, regardless of whether their a Football player, Rugby player, or any other form of athlete. Foster is no exception...when you're recovering from being under the knife, you're gonna be sore, and certainly protective of the site most vulnerable to injury, which no doubt has an effect on performance.

Psychologically speaking, Foster's head may not be 100% in the game for his Week 5 matchup against the Colts, but that's not to say he wont be productive (don't forget, this is Arian Foster we're talking about here). We can expect a couple of yards made and some breakout runs on show, but don't expect anything too special this week. The guy needs to heal up, ensure re-injury does not occur (which happens all too often with Foster), and remember that there's plenty more weeks left in the season before he goes hell for leather.

Expect Foster to be slower than usual, but a return to the 5* Running Back we're used to seeing from Week 6 or 7 onwards.

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

The Union Jax Fan Club


The Union Jax is the Jacksonville Jaguars UK fan club which was created in March 2013.

It is the only official UK based NFL fan club, and by the end of the 2014 regular season, had over 35,000 members (and is continuing to grow). The Jaguars have the fastest growing fan base of all the NFL teams in the UK, which has led many to speculate that with such popularity, the Jaguars could be the team to re-locate to the UK when the NFL introduces it's first UK based team to the National Football Leage. Membership is free, and throughout the year, Union Jax members receive regular e-zines, with exclusive Jaguars content, access to events (including fan forums with Jaguars players), competitions, trips to Jacksonville, pre-game field access, VIP hospitality and much more.

If you're new to NFL, or ready to back a team that has significant roots in the UK, look no further. To sign up, simply click the "Register" link on NFLUK.com.


The Jacksonville Jaguars Management:

Owner - Shahid Khan

Owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars since December 2011, Shahid Khan – known as Shad – has captured the imagination and respect of the business and sports world in the United States and beyond.

When first introduced as the Jaguars owner, Shad expressed a desire to extend the Jaguars and NFL brands in the UK and beyond, and in August 2012, made good on his word by joining NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell as well as Jacksonville officials and community leaders to announce that the Jacksonville Jaguars would play one home game in Wembley Stadium for four consecutive seasons. In July 2013 Shad also purchased Fulham Football Club in South-West London.


Head Coach - Gus Bradley

Former Seattle Seahawks defensive co-ordinator, Gus joined the Jaguars as head coach in January 2013. Gus is a young and consistently positive and enthusiastic Head Coach.



General Manager - David Caldwell

David has been working in the NFL since 1996 having previously worked in the scouting department of the Carolina Panthers, Indianapolis Colts and Atlanta Falcons. He joined the Jaguars in January 2013 and was responsible for hiring Gus Bradley.

The ROAR Cheerleaders

THE ROAR are the professional Jacksonville Jaguars cheerleaders who perform choreographed high-energy routines at home games. When not on the playing field, members of THE ROAR serve as goodwill ambassadors for the Jaguars by participating in various community and charitable events nationally and internationally. These leading ladies also spend time entertaining the United States military troops all over the world.

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Tottenham Releases Images of New Stadium


Tottenham's newest stadium will host at least 2 NFL games per year for 10 years, and is set to open in 2018.

Chairman for Tottenham Hotspur, Daniel Levy, stated that it will be the first of its kind in the world, hosting state of the art features, and creating a world class sporting village in the heart of North London. The new stadium will incorporate:


  • Separate NFL specific facilities in addition to Premier League Soccer facilities;
  • Attached 180 room hotel to accommodate visiting players;
  • 61,000 seating capacity (similar to NFL stadiums in the USA, unlike the 90,000 seating capacity at Wembley;
  • Seating designs similar to NFL stadiums;
  • Retractable real-grass field which will accommodate an artificial-grass field underneath that will be used for NFL games (allowing Premier League matches and NFL matches to be played on the same weekend).
Other features of the stadium also include a "Sky-Walk" across the top of the stadium and a new building to host extreme sports, including the world's tallest indoor climbing wall.
The current timeline for completing the project is detailed as follows:


  • Summer 2015 – Basement works commence and consultation on the improved Northumberland Development Project proposals begins.
  • Autumn 2015 – submission of a new planning application to Haringey Council.
  • December 2015 – planning application considered by Haringey Council’s planning committee and by the Greater London Authority.
  • Spring 2016 – Subject to the completion of planning permission, work begins on the revised scheme.
  • 2017/18 Season – the Club plays away for one season to enable a faster construction of the new Stadium.
  • August 2018 – new Stadium complete and open in time for the 2018/19 season.
The construction is a huge deal for NFL fans in the UK, as it achieves an obvious destination for a future UK based NFL team. With the millions of pounds in financing and construction costs being spent on NFL specific criteria, it is hard to imagine such a budget being used to simply host a few NFL games per year. More than likely, the NFL and Tottenham Hotspur are building towards hosting a full-time NFL franchise in London from 2020 onwards, either by moving a current NFL team across the Atlantic, or starting from scratch using NFL free agency and national talent across the United Kingdom.

At the very least, the 10 year deal gives the NFL the chance to test the market in London and trial the new stadium venue before considering a permanent team across the pond. With the NFL expanding in growth each year in the UK, and fan bases for teams such as the Jacksonville Jaguars growing exponentially, there is growing confidence that a permanent team will be established in London in the years to come.

Thursday, 17 September 2015

The Challenges Ahead


The NFL establishing a permanent franchise in London is massive news for the UK's 12 million American Football fans. For a long time, die-hard supporters have tuned in to broadcasts on Sky Sports and Channel 4, not only to listen to below-par commentary from British TV hosts, but also to stay up late and watch their favourite teams play, sometimes until 1:30am.

Now, fans may soon be able to watch regular season games live from the new and upcoming stadium in Tottenham, while those who wish to become fans (and see what the NFL is all about) will have the chance to support the newest team addition to the NFL, the London Jaguars/Monarchs/Bull Dogs [Name to be decided].

However, adding a new team to the NFL (and presumably, the AFC/NFC East) is no easy feat. Numerous pundits and experts have detailed issues that need to be addressed before Roger Goddell can cut the ribbon and welcome the NFL's first international team since the days of NFL Europe.

Such issues are:

  • The NFL has tried this before: Over the course of NFL Europe's timeline, the National Football League sunk between $400-500 million into the minor league system across the Atlantic, only for the London based team to be disbanded in 1998 and moved to Berlin.

  • Time difference: The UK (minus day light savings), is 5 hours ahead of New York and 8 hours ahead of Seattle. This means that prime-time games don't start until 1:30pm, and the NFL's elite program, the Super Bowl, begins at 11:30pm (highly inconvenient when millions of Brits have to work on the following Monday morning).

  • Distance: London is 5,300km away from the nearest NFL team on the east coast, and an away game at the Seattle Seahawks would require a round trip of 17,000km. Considering teams play 8 away games per season, that is a lot of travelling, meaning higher travel costs, and extreme jetlag for players.

  • The players: maybe some players could move from the NFL to the new team in London, but there is no doubt that the American Football talent in the UK is no where near that of the USA. Most kids in the US learn American Football from a young age, and are competing by the time they reach their teens. In the UK however, you will struggle to find any high school that offers American Football on the curriculum, and most players in the UK only become competitive once they join their University team (that is, if their University offers American Football on their curriculum too).

  • The fans: most NFL supporters in the UK already have allegiances to current National Football League teams. It will be no easy feat to have fans switch allegiance based on geography.
When difficulties such as this are presented, it seems hard to imagine that any NFL team could be successful in London. However, where there is a will, there is a way. With a little tweaking of the current status quo, an NFL team in London not only becomes possible, but probable:

Problem: "The NFL has tried this before"

Solution: NFL Europe was somewhat of a disaster for the National Football League, but lets not forget, the reason it all came crashing down was because the interest was not there. The quality of teams was poor, and the players themselves were anything but celebrities.
An NFL franchise solely in London however, competing with the highest calibre of players in the world like Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Julio Jones and LeVeon Bell, brings huge interest to the UK (the International Series tickets selling out year after year is testimony to this). Lets be honest with ourselves too, the Brits love a good matchup, and we love to cheer on the underdogs, so for a homegrown team in London to take on the New England Patriots or the Pittsburgh Steelers is all too tempting for NFL fans. Sure, NFL Europe was a black mark on the NFL success story, but with markets becoming more globalised and sports fans always looking for multiple outlets to cheer on their favourite teams, a London franchise will have little in common with the European league of old.

Problem: "Time difference"

Solution: As much as the NFL tried to distance itself from the similarities of rugby as much as possible, this is where Mr. Goddell will need to take a leaf out of SANZAR's book.
The Rugby Championship (informally known as the "Quad-Nations") is an annual rugby contest between South Africa, Australia, Argentina and New Zealand. Of course, these teams have huge distances to travel and play in a sport which, lets face it, is much more physical than American Football and subject to the effects of jet-lag and time-zones. To put it in perspective, the South African team must travel over 11,500km to play in New Zealand, and New Zealand must travel over 9,300km to play in Argentina.
However, the solution decided to combat these issues is for the teams to play in blocks. This means that Argentina travel to play Australia and New Zealand in one go, and the return fixtures are played a few weeks later.
It's a little tricky, but the NFL could certainly adopt this approach. The London team could play 4 home games in a row, and then play 4 away games in a row. After all, if the Rugby Championship can manage this year after year over vast distances, there is no reason why, with a little tweaking and cooperation from teams, that the NFL wouldn't be able to utilise this idea.

Problem: "Distance"

Solution: The issue of jet-lag has already been covered in the point above, and to some degree, so has the issue of travel costs for teams. However, this seems to be the least of the NFL's concerns, considering they are a multi-billion dollar corporation who have already begun talks with Virgin Atlantic about a possible loyalty discount for a future London based franchise.

Problem: "The players"

Solution: The UK will never have the pool of talent to play American Football like the USA does. For starters, we don't have American Football as part of a national school curriculum to get kids involved at a young age, and our population resources are slightly less than those of the Americans (65 million in the UK compared to over 350 million in the USA). However, for home grown talent to play in a London based NFL franchise, you need to look no further than one of the greatest, most physically enduring sports on the planet (which coincidentally, just so happens to be filled with talent from England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland)...rugby.
San Francisco running back, Jarryd Hayne, is a perfect example of how former rugby players can be adapted to the American equivalent. After all, if a rugby player can run on a field for 80 minutes with nothing more than a gum-shield for protection, there is no reason why said player cannot be adapted to run for 60 minutes (stopping and starting) in full protective gear.
And that's if a London team decides to sign British talent. The possibility has also arisen that a current NFL team may be permanently relocated to London, just as happened with the Los Angeles Raiders, the Los Angeles Rams and the Houston Oilers many years ago. The bookies favourite is the Jacksonville Jaguars, as their owner, Shahid Khan, not only owns Fulham Football Club in the Premier League, but also signed up the Jaguars to one "home" game per season for 4 years. In addition, the Jaguars are the only NFL team to have an official UK based fan club, and considering the average attendance for Jaguars fans at EverBank Field in Florida hovers just around 59,000 people each game (out of a potential 84,000), it is a business initiative for Khan to relocate the Jaguars to Wembley's 90,000 capacity stadium (or more moderately, Tottenham's new state of the art stadium, set to be completed in 2018 with a capacity of 61,000).

Problem: "The fans"

Solution: Will UK fans switch their allegiances from the Patriots, 49ers, Chargers and Packers (among others) to supporting the London [Insert name]? Probably not. Let's not forget, most people in the UK select their chosen NFL teams because of family members living in that particular state, or because it was where they saw their first NFL game, or some other sentimental reason for pledging their support. You only have to attend one International Series match to know that fans do not attend the game to cheer on whoever is playing at Wembley that day. Most turn up in different jerseys, simply because they love the game, and want to experience the NFL live. However, with an NFL team based in London, it is highly likely that fans will somewhat adopt the team as their second squad...cheering on the Texans in their Sunday morning matchup, while cheering on the London franchise in their afternoon matchup (for example). It the London franchise lasts the test of time, it will grow its own fan base naturally, but it's doubtful that the world's first NFL team outside of the USA, competing with the best teams on the planet and giving UK fans the opportunity to witness the NFL live on a constant basis will draw a limited number of fans. With 8 home games a season (only 3 more than what the NFL International Series is proposing in 2017, drawing sell-out crowds), expect the fans to come and support their national team.

Problems arise in every great business venture, but what makes a business venture successful is the way corporations find ways around those problems. The NFL has the reputation, the budget and the brains to solve each of the problems faced with establishing an NFL franchise in London, and by using (or taking note) of the above solutions, there is very little reason to suggest that it cant make the idea of a UK team become a reality, especially with the growing support and desire within the United Kingdom.