relocation: Former Raiders CEO Amy Trask Talks Kroenke, Rams' Future & Stadium

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  • #16600
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant


    Segment 2 – Amy Trask 1-15-15
    Thursday, January 15, 2015 12:27 PM

    Former Raiders CEO Amy Trask Talks Stan Kroenke, Rams’ Future and Stadium Proposal
    Brian Hoffman posted on January 15, 2015 13:00

    Former Raiders CEO Amy Trask, who recently came on Edmonds, McKernan and Moe to discuss the extensive NFL relocation process, joined The Hollywood Casino Press Box on Thursday to talk more about Stan Kroenke, his intentions to move and the future of the Rams.

    Here are some highlights of the interview. Listen to the whole thing below:

    Is there any chance that Congress intervenes?: There have been rumblings from time to time, that Congress insert itself in manners pertaining to sports and relocation, but I think we understand that Congress often rumbles in a lot of things though.

    Will Kroenke act in good faith? I had the pleasure of working with Stan Kroenke before I left the league. In my experience, he is a man who acts and operates in good faith. He is a tremendous businessman and he was a terrifc teammate to me in the league sense of the word. And it was always my perception that he operated and acted in good faith. I do believe Stan is someone who operates in good faith.

    On public’s perception Kroenke is not well liked: (Him being a good teammate) was certainly my perception. There’s a number of owners who don’t serve on league committees. I don’t know that serving on league committees makes someone a better owner or more distinguished owner than others. Stan was at many, many meetings that I attended. I enjoyed all of my interactions with him. I did believe and I do believe he operates in good faith. But you do point to an interesting feature of the league itself. It does require a vote of the membership to move…and in many regards votes are popularity contest.

    On Jerry Jones’ comments a team can relocate with or without the NFL’s approval: An owner can choose to work with the league in terms of a proposed relocation. An owner can move without regard to league processes and approvals. If an owner does choose to move his team without the league’s blessing, does the league seek to enjoin that? Does the league allow the move and then sue for damages for the value of the market that was taken by that owner? There’s all sorts of things that can flow from a proposed relocation. I’m not sure what Jerry’s motivation was in making those comments, but I too found them very interesting.

    On the new renderings by the river: It looks like a neat drawing of a really neat facility, but there are a lot of details that are outside of that. What is the funding, are there taxpayers dollars involved, what are the environmental issues of building a stadium by the river? So there is a lot more at play. It is a nice first step, but nothing more.

    http://www.insidestl.com/insideSTLcom/RadioShows/FeatureInterviews/tabid/339/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/16072/Former-Raiders-CEO-Amy-Trask-Talks-Stan-Kroenke-Rams-Future-and-Stadium-Proposal.aspx

    Agamemnon

    #16605
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Sports Business Journal’s Dan Kaplan Talks Latest on Kroenke, Rams’ Future
    Brendan Marks posted on January 13, 2015 10:30

    Sports Business Journal’s Daniel Kaplan, who recently wrote the San Diego Chargers plan to “actively oppose the potential relocation to the Los Angeles area of the St. Louis Rams,” joined The Ryan Kelley Morning After on Tuesday to talk about the St. Louis stadium proposal.

    Here are some highlights of the interview. Listen to the whole thing below:

    On Los Angeles situation: This is becoming a bigger and bigger issue within the NFL. Owners are going to have to take sides. The Chargers do not want another team in LA. They are going to activiely oppose whatever the Rams do. I’ve even hears suggestions that the Missouri Congressional delegation will get involved and say the proposed Los Angeles stadium is to near LAX and Homeland Security and the FAA should get involved. There’s a lot of stuff going on that hasn’t come out.

    Seahawks tried to move in 1996, but the NFL stopped them: There is precedent for that. Everyone is pointing to the Raiders. The relocation bylaws now in existence was in response to an appeals court decision in the late 1990s. It was crafted with those legal decisions in mind. That’s why it says the team has to make a good-faith effort to get a deal done in the local market.

    On Stan Kroenke ignoring NFL and moving anyways: Jerry Jones is quoted in the New York Times today saying he can do that. That was stunning to me. I understand Jerry Jones has in the past taken on the NFL, he wants a team in LA. He is not a fan of some of the smaller markets. To out and out say it doesn’t matter what the NFL says…who cares about that bylaw, I was astonished.

    What’s your sense on the Rams’ chances of moving to LA: I don’t think there’s any doubt that Kroenke wishes to go. He didn’t send a representative to the stadium unveiling. The question really becomes, what does the NFL do. Does the NFL say, ‘whoa slow down Stan?’

    More on Chargers: You have a team in San Diego that feels LA is its market now. They have actively tried to get a new stadium in San Diego in 10 to 15 years to no avail. They’ve done a lot more in San Diego than the Rams have done in St. Louis to try to get a new stadium. And the Rams have already relocated out of LA. The Chargers point is the Rams don’t deserve first crack at the LA market. They already were there and left

    Has Kroenke gone rogue? There was talk out there that Kroenke hadn’t even told the NFL (he was going to unveil the Inglewood stadium proposal). It’s in the eye of the beholder whether he went rogue, but I’m sure this wasn’t the NFL’s preference. The opinion (on whether the NFL has final say) will be tested here.

    http://www.insidestl.com/insideSTLcom/RadioShows/FeatureInterviews/tabid/339/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/16031/Sports-Business-Journals-Dan-Kaplan-Talks-Latest-on-Kroenke-Rams-Future.aspx

    Agamemnon

    #16608
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    The Amy Trask interview… was…um…interesting: Cool-Corporate-shark vs Emotional-celebrity-Homer.

    w
    v

    #16614
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    The Amy Trask interview… was…um…interesting: Cool-Corporate-shark vs Emotional-celebrity-Homer.

    w
    v

    She seems to be the most intelligent of the people who have talked about Kroenke and the Rams. imo

    Agamemnon

    #16618
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    wv wrote
    The Amy Trask interview… was…um…interesting: Cool-Corporate-shark vs Emotional-celebrity-Homer.

    w
    v

    She seems to be the most intelligent of the people who have talked about Kroenke and the Rams.;

    Agreed.

    Cept i suspect she doesn’t
    have a Soul.

    w
    v

    #16649
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Thursday, January 15th
    http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/audio/total-information-pm/eric-grubman-president-of-business-ventures-for-the-nfl/
    Eric Grubman, President Of Business Ventures For The NFL
    KMOX’s Tom Ackerman talks with Eric Grubman about stadium development in the NFL.

    Agamemnon

    #16651
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    NFL exec: St. Louis must build new stadium to keep NFL

    By David Hunn

    http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/nfl-exec-st-louis-must-build-new-stadium-to-keep/article_1683d7d6-ddf1-545f-9c95-5f5b6d6a4ff4.html

    ST. LOUIS • Local planners must build a new football stadium here, or St. Louis will not hold on to its franchise, a key National Football League executive said Thursday.

    NFL Executive Vice President Eric Grubman, who is in charge of stadium development as well as exploration of the Los Angeles market, came to St. Louis on Thursday to meet with Gov. Jay Nixon’s two-man stadium team.

    Grubman confirmed, for the first time by a league official, that St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke is indeed “looking” elsewhere.

    “I’m not going to get into specifics, other than he has said he’s going to keep his options open and he’s looking,” Grubman said.

    Grubman also said Kroenke has not made it clear to the league whether he wants to move to Los Angeles. More telling was an announcement this month that Kroenke is part of a development group with plans to build a stadium outside Los Angeles in an area where Kroenke bought land last year.

    League officials are not considering such a move, Grubman said.

    “We’re looking for a solution to the St. Louis Rams to be the St. Louis Rams, not for some other team to be the St. Louis Rams,” he said.

    Is a stadium necessary for that solution?

    “Yes,” Grubman said.

    Grubman said he came to St. Louis this week to offer the NFL’s help in development of a new stadium here, and with hopes that Nixon’s team will make progress on the plan announced last week.

    Last Friday, that team — Edward Jones Dome attorney Robert Blitz and former Anheuser-Busch President David Peacock — proposed a 64,000-seat, open-air stadium on the Mississippi riverfront, just north of downtown.

    It would cost between $860 million and $985 million. Estimates call for as much as $450 million from Kroenke and the NFL, and $350 million in an extension of the public bonds still paying down the Jones Dome, where the Rams now play.

    The riverfront plan is the newest effort to keep the Rams in St. Louis. Regional officials have struggled for years to come up with a solution to an aging Edward Jones Dome. Kroenke, they said, never sat down to negotiate.

    While the league has previously said no team will move this year, owners don’t usually tell the league how they plan to act, Grubman said. Certainly not before “they’ve fully investigated all the different opportunities.”

    Grubman would not further discuss what Kroenke has said to league officials. But moving, he noted, would at least require the vote of 24 of the league’s 32 owners, and there is no indication that Kroenke would break league rules, he said.

    Grubman also said that St. Louis can’t keep the Rams without a new stadium.

    Two years ago, the team won a lengthy battle over upgrades required by its lease at the Jones Dome. An arbitration panel ruled in favor of the Rams’ request for publicly financed renovations worth perhaps $700 million. Dome authorities declined, giving the Rams the option to go year-to-year on their lease.

    “The way that was pursued over the past couple years has failed,” Grubman said.

    “The probability that that gets resurrected is zero. Therefore we have to look at a new solution.”

    The NFL’s role, he said, is to help give the St. Louis effort “the best chance possible.”

    The north riverfront proposal, he said, isn’t yet real.

    “A real plan means that the steps are all actionable,” he said. “If you need authorities, you’ve assembled those authorities. If you need land, you’ve assembled that land.”

    Grubman described the plan here as something of a race. Multiple sites appear attractive in Los Angeles. Multiple teams are interested. By necessity, the addition of a team in one city requires the loss of a team from another.

    Adding a team to the league, Grubman said, is “not on the table.”

    The league must have a solution here soon. Certainly by the end of the year, he said.

    Is the Los Angeles plan ahead of St. Louis? “I don’t look at it that way,” he said.

    He’s looking instead at what St. Louis can do: “Can you assemble the site? Can you assemble the financing? And can a business plan be put together, collectively, by all of us, that’s attractive?”

    It’s too early to grade the St. Louis plan, he said. The location on the waterfront is “terrific.” But the league needs more certainty about the costs and the revenue.

    The NFL is embarking on a market study in St. Louis, he said.

    “This is a great sports market. It’s been a terrific football market,” Grubman said. “But I don’t know what this project is going to yield. That’s not just about how many fans went to games in the past few years. That’s about what the cost is for the stadium, how long it will take to build it, and what’s the economic yield out of that project.”

    Grubman hopes that all of the St. Louis unknowns will be nailed down before he reports back to the league and owners.

    “I don’t want to put any lines in the sand,” he said. “… But what we’ve talked about is we really ought to be assembling this plan this calendar year. Which doesn’t mean Dec. 31.”

    Peacock later said that he met with both the league and the Rams on Thursday.

    He termed the meetings “very good.”

    #16657
    GreatRamNTheSky
    Participant


    Great video by reporter Eric Geller.
    former and current Rams are coaching the NFLPA squads in Carson / LA this week for the NFLPA all star game which takes place this Saturday Jan 17th. Eric interviews Jackie Slater, Nolan Cromwell, Lawrence McCutcheon, Greg Williams and Tre Mason about the move back to LA.

    Grits

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by GreatRamNTheSky.
    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by Avatar photozn.
    #16660
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    In a nutshell:

    “….The NFL’s role, he said, is to help give the St. Louis effort “the best chance possible.”
    The north riverfront proposal, he said, isn’t yet real.
    “A real plan means that the steps are all actionable,” he said. “If you need authorities, you’ve assembled those authorities. If you need land, you’ve assembled that land.”
    Grubman described the plan here as something of a race…”

    w
    v

    #16662
    GreatRamNTheSky
    Participant

    There was another article in the ESPN San Diego website and Mark Fabiani was on the Mighty 1090 yesterday and was spiting fire at local businessmen in San Diego. Fabiani was very clear that the Chargers are being backed into a corner because teams (Rams) are threatening to move into LA and they Chargers are going to have to make a move to protect themselves.

    Okay, lets see what logically the Chargers can do.

    Lawsuit? Not likely. Too expensive and could last several years. In the mean time Kroenke moves into LA and as they say, possession is 9/10 of the law.

    Partner with Kroenke on the City of Champions Project? If Kroenke and the Roderick group are open to it, why not. The league allegedly would like two teams in LA.

    Make a deal with Anschultz and sell him 35 percent minority ownership in the team. Hey, the Lakers did it when the Staples Center was built. Why not? Seems there are not many good options left for Spanos and the Chargers.

    Spanos and the Chargers can wait and dig their heels into the mud in SD as they have done for over a decade now and end up a BIG LOSER IN all of this and still not have a viable stadium in SD.

    Sometimes you have to compromise and Spanos may have to learn that lesson rather quickly.

    Grits

    #16663
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    I’ve never understood this “The League wants TWO teams in LA” thing.

    Why, if its true, would the NFL want two teams in LA?
    Isn’t it better if markets are spread out a bit?
    Is it so that teams can still leverage their towns for
    new stadiums even if one team moves to LA ?

    Bernie Article on the Grubman meeting:
    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/columns/bernie-miklasz/bernie-nothing-guaranteed-with-rams/article_f53d3d86-9308-54e9-a4e0-21620da753ac.html

    w
    v

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by Avatar photowv.
    #16665
    Dak
    Participant

    Bottom line, from that Grubman story, is that the STL group has to put together all of the particulars NOW of how they plan to build an NFL stadium. If they can’t do that get their ducks in a row by the end of this year, it sure sounds like that leaves the door open for Stan to move whenever he pleases.

    #16666
    GreatRamNTheSky
    Participant

    One very interesting thing that Grubman said yesterday. When asked about Kroenke’s announcement and if it caught the league by surprise two weeks ago now, Grubman said they were made aware it was coming and they expected it. BOOM!

    Okay, so, they didn’t exactly tell Kroenke not to do it, did they? Oh my, after the alleged there shall be no teams moving to LA in 2015 and they give Kroenke the thumbs up on the City of Champions? Hell yes they did! You know why because now they have a viable stadium situation in LA. An 80,000 seat palace which only needs approval of the Citizens of Inglewood and let me tell you that the response from the citizens of Inglewood is favorable. They are collecting signatures already and if they get enough signatures this will not even have to be put to a public vote in June. It would be confirmed by as early as March.

    One thing the league allegedly stated was that 2015 would be a year they identify viable stadium options in LA. And they knew this City of Champions announcement was coming. Interesting, don’t you think?

    One other statement Grubman made was St Louis is going to have to build a new stadium. Lets focus on that word “New” for a moment. Peacock’s presentation was for a new stadium, however, if you compare that 64,000 seat 1970s style stadium Peacock has proposed compared to AT&T Stadium in Dallas, the new Falcons 70,000 seat stadium in Atlanta and the City of Champions 80,000 seat stadium you may come to understand that “New” means new as in style of stadium trending in the NFL. AT&T has set the bar high folks and Kroenke has already set up a deal that will give the league a brand new 80,000 seat stadium in Inglewood/ LA.

    Get the drift? Grubman is being very professional and saying all the right things but lets be clear. The league is not going to kill a deal for an 80,000 seat stadium in LA and keep the Rams in the love child of QualCom and Anaheim stadium.

    Grubman is in STL to rubber stamp the league’s position.

    Grits

    #16667
    GreatRamNTheSky
    Participant

    Bottom line, from that Grubman story, is that the STL group has to put together all of the particulars NOW of how they plan to build an NFL stadium. If they can’t do that get their ducks in a row by the end of this year, it sure sounds like that leaves the door open for Stan to move whenever he pleases.

    Just my opinion but and I think you said this in a sense but, I think Grubman is in STL to rubber stamp this thing as concluded. and I think that the league is not going to kill an 80,000 seat stadium in LA to keep STL happy.

    Stan is moving and the league knows it. Grubman even said the league was made aware of the City of Champions deal before it was announced.

    Grits

    #16668
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Dak wrote:
    Bottom line, from that Grubman story, is that the STL group has to put together all of the particulars NOW of how they plan to build an NFL stadium. If they can’t do that get their ducks in a row by the end of this year, it sure sounds like that leaves the door open for Stan to move whenever he pleases.

    Just my opinion but and I think you said this in a sense but, I think Grubman is in STL to rubber stamp this thing as concluded. and I think that the league is not going to kill an 80,000 seat stadium in LA to keep STL happy.

    Stan is moving and the league knows it. Grubman even said the league was made aware of the City of Champions deal before it was announced.

    Grits

    Well if its a done deal, then why is the league telling St.Louis
    to go ahead and build a New stadium?

    w
    v

    #16683
    Dak
    Participant

    Just my opinion but and I think you said this in a sense but, I think Grubman is in STL to rubber stamp this thing as concluded. and I think that the league is not going to kill an 80,000 seat stadium in LA to keep STL happy.

    Stan is moving and the league knows it. Grubman even said the league was made aware of the City of Champions deal before it was announced.

    Grits

    Well if its a done deal, then why is the league telling St.Louis
    to go ahead and build a New stadium?

    w
    v

    Grits, I don’t agree with your perspective on this. I still think STL has a chance if it plays ball with the NFL, but who knows? The NFL has to follow through with its rules to avoid potential lawsuits, and maybe the major players are all just going through the motions in STL … only to have SK reject the plan and say he met all of the requirements of relocating, and the NFL to say, yeah, SK followed the rules. Anything’s possible. I just know that, no matter what, STL has to put together a doable deal by the end of this year in order to have any chance to keep the NFL here. Should be interesting for the next year or so.

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by Dak.
    #16687
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Segment 6 – Neil DeMause on the Rams stadium 1-16-15
    Friday, January 16, 2015 11:55 AM

    NFL says Rams not moving, but also not staying without new stadium, so snap to it, mister
    Posted on January 16, 2015 by Neil deMause

    The NFL has finally spoken about the St. Louis Rams stadium situation, and by “the NFL” I mean designated stadium grubber Eric Grubman, and by “spoken” I mean “issued ultimatums that without a new stadium, the Rams will move somewhere else, though the league doesn’t plan on them moving, because they expect to get a new stadium, capisce?”

    League officials are not considering such a move [of the Rams to Los Angeles], Grubman said.

    “We’re looking for a solution to the St. Louis Rams to be the St. Louis Rams, not for some other team to be the St. Louis Rams,” he said.

    Is a stadium necessary for that solution?

    “Yes,” Grubman said.

    And a stadium, Grubman made clear, means a fully signed, sealed, and delivered stadium, not just a plan for one:

    The NFL’s role, he said, is to help give the St. Louis effort “the best chance possible.”

    The north riverfront proposal, he said, isn’t yet real.

    “A real plan means that the steps are all actionable,” he said. “If you need authorities, you’ve assembled those authorities. If you need land, you’ve assembled that land.” …

    “I don’t want to put any lines in the sand,” he said. “… But what we’ve talked about is we really ought to be assembling this plan this calendar year. Which doesn’t mean Dec. 31.”

    So the NFL is clear: Unless a St. Louis stadium is approved this year, and not late this year, but not that there’s a firm deadline or anything, then the Rams are totally moving somewhere, but the league isn’t thinking about that. Yet.

    Once again, this is a non-threat threat that it’s impossible to know whether to take seriously, because Grubman would be saying the exact same thing in each of several scenarios:

    Rams owner Stan Kroenke wants to go to L.A., the league doesn’t want him to, and Grubman has been sent out to shake loose a St. Louis stadium offer that Kroenke can’t refuse so that both sides can go away happy.
    Kroenke wants to go to L.A. and the league is fine with it, but Grubman has been sent to shake loose a St. Louis stadium because more options are always good, if only to turn up the heat on Inglewood voters to stop asking questions about the stadium plan there and just approve it in a referendum already.
    Kroenke’s Inglewood stadium plan is a bluff, and Grubman is trying to make it an effective bluff by telling St. Louis, “We’ll pull the trigger, don’t test us.”

    Each of these is completely plausible, given what we know now. The only way to tell which is true will be if Missouri officials (or voters) reject stadium deal, and we’ll see whether Kroenke and Grubman really shoot the dog, or slink back to St. Louis with their tail between their legs, as we’ve seen happen before.

    http://www.fieldofschemes.com/

    Field of Schemes
    How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit, Revised and Expanded Edition
    Neil deMause and Joanna Cagan

    paperback
    2008. 424 pp.
    978-0-8032-6016-0
    $22.95 t

    Author Web Site
    Read an Excerpt (pdf)

    Field of Schemes is a play-by-play account of how the drive for new sports stadiums and arenas drains $2 billion a year from public treasuries for the sake of private profit. While the millionaires who own sports franchises have seen the value of their assets soar under this scheme, taxpayers, urban residents, and sports fans have all come out losers, forced to pay both higher taxes and higher ticket prices for seats that, thanks to the layers of luxury seating that typify new stadiums, usually offer a worse view of the action.

    The stories in Field of Schemes, from Baltimore to Cleveland and Minneapolis to Seattle and dozens of places in between, tell of the sports-team owners who use their money and their political muscle to get their way, and of the stories of spirited local groups—like Detroit’s Tiger Stadium Fan Club and Boston’s Save Fenway Park!—that have fought to save the games we love and the public dollars our cities need.

    This revised and expanded edition features the first comprehensive reporting on the recent stadium battles in Washington DC, New York City, and Boston as well as updates on how cities have fared with the first wave of new stadiums built in recent years.

    Neil deMause is a Brooklyn-based journalist who writes regularly for the Village Voice, Extra!, and Baseball Prospectus and runs the stadium-watch Web site fieldofschemes.com.

    Joanna Cagan is a teacher and writer in New York City. She has written for numerous publications, including the Village Voice, the New York Times Magazine, and Interview.

    http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/product/Field-of-Schemes,673388.aspx

    Agamemnon

    #16699
    Avatar photowv
    Participant
    #16700
    Dak
    Participant

    Yeah, it’s an effed up world where we’re expected to provide hundreds of millions of dollars to support wealthy owners. And, well, it’s an effed up world. Cities really, really want their major sports franchises.

    #16702
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Yeah, it’s an effed up world where we’re expected to provide hundreds of millions of dollars to support wealthy owners. And, well, it’s an effed up world. Cities really, really want their major sports franchises.

    i dream of a day
    when cities build giant
    Used Book Stores.

    w
    v

    #16707
    Dak
    Participant

    i dream of a day
    when cities build giant
    Used Book Stores.

    w
    v

    Oh, sure, you socialist commie. And, I bet they just let people borrow the books for free.

    #16708
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Oh, sure, you socialist commie. And, I bet they just let people borrow the books for free.

    I picked up a book by Jim Hannifan the other
    day for a quarter. I figured i might find one
    anecdote or a quote or two.

    Nada.

    Nothin.

    The most useless book I’ve ever skimmed.

    I should just bake it.

    w
    v

    #16709
    Dak
    Participant

    I picked up a book by Jim Hannifan the other
    day for a quarter. I figured i might find one
    anecdote or a quote or two.

    Nada.

    Nothin.

    The most useless book I’ve ever skimmed.

    I should just bake it.

    w
    v

    I’m reading 11/22/63 right now. It’s a Stephen King book about a guy who goes through a time portal and tries to stop the JFK assassination. It’s over 1,000 pages, and in the middle of the book, it’s a little slow. I’m about two-thirds the way through. I forgot how much I like King’s writing.

    #16711
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    I’m reading 11/22/63 right now. It’s a Stephen King book about a guy who goes through a time portal and tries to stop the JFK assassination. It’s over 1,000 pages, and in the middle of the book,

    Horror according to King is about having to experience your worst fears. The most alien thing you dread.

    So he ought to write a novel about an editor.

    #16714
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    well from grubman’s statements the league obviously knew about kroenke’s plans.

    and while they’re doing and saying the right things right now i wouldn’t be surprised if they find some way for the rams to move to los angeles. it’s the move that makes the most sense and it’s their best chance of having a team in los angeles.

    a team with previous ties to the city. an owner capable of building a stadium with a good business sense and plenty of money. a team that actually has grounds to make a move.

    i also wouldn’t be surprised if the league has known this for a long time and has given their tacit approval.

    i also wouldn’t be surprised if they have a plan for another team to eventually move to st. louis at some point in the future. jacksonville. but i think this is all stuff we’ve been saying for awhile now.

    #16727
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i can’t stop thinking about this move or no move.

    one question. grubman says that any stadium plan must have all steps that are actionable by the end of the year. and he’s even vague about what the “end of the year” actually entails.

    well. part of the stadium plan in st. louis requires that kroenke fork up some of his own money. could stan just refuse to fork up any of his own money for the st. louis stadium thereby sabotaging the st. louis plan and allowing him to move forward with his own stadium in los angeles?

    this grubman fellow seems a sneaky little dude.

    #16728
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/goodell-jones-have-a-talk/article_a7578c2f-c649-51b3-b87e-9f5c00291b27.html

    Goodell, Jones have a talk

    By Jim Thomas

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell personally called Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones this week to get clarification on Jones’ comments to the New York Times suggesting Stan Kroenke can move the Rams to Los Angeles if he wants — with or without league approval.
    “Put (Jones’ remarks) in context,” NFL executive Eric Grubman told the Post-Dispatch on Thursday. “This man’s trying to get to the Super Bowl. He was in Green Bay, Wis., and he just lost an incredible game. A lot of passion and emotion.

    “And he gets hit with that question from an out-of-town reporter. … Jerry wasn’t even quite sure what he said beyond acknowledging historically teams have moved without (permission). So when asked — ‘Did you say that?’ — he wasn’t even sure.”

    As in not even sure what he had said.

    “Now, is that impossible?” Grubman said. “What if you just lost that game and somebody hit you with that question? … I’m not going to speak for him. But I’ll hazard a guess on this one, that he would not tell you this could be done without a vote.

    “To suggest otherwise would be to suggest that any owner can pick which rules they want to go for a vote and which they don’t want to go for a vote.”

    Grubman said Goodell didn’t talk to Jones in a critical way, but simply asked him what he meant by his comments.

    “It quickly became obvious that there’s nothing really here,” Grubman said. “Because in the heat of the moment, you had an owner who wasn’t really focused on the issue at hand, and talked about history and remembers that but doesn’t remember much of the detail beyond that.”

    In summary, Grubman characterized Jones’ remarks as a stray comment that needed to be put to bed.

    “Everybody’s gonna follow the rules,” Grubman said.

    Grubman was in St. Louis on Thursday meeting with local officials on the region’s stadium plan. He said he has been to St. Louis about a half a dozen times over the last two or three years.

    Jones’ remarks cast doubt on whether Kroenke would try to follow relocation guidelines and gain owners’ approval to move. It would take approval of 24 of 32 NFL owners to move the Rams to Los Angeles.

    Team and league officials have told the Post-Dispatch that Kroenke will not go rogue and try to relocate without approval. Grubman reiterated that on Thursday.

    When asked if Kroenke has said he will follow league rules, Grubman replied: “Oh, yes. And he has followed the rules. Not on this (specifically), because there’s never been any suggestion that he wouldn’t.

    “Here’s the better example: We’ve proscribed guidelines for how to approach the L.A. market for any club that was interested, including keeping the league staff informed and so forth and so on.

    “All the clubs that have been acting in that regard have been doing that, including the St. Louis Rams. So there’s no hint of (going rogue).”

    As much as Grubman underscored the fact that Kroenke would follow the rules, he pointed out that there could be subjectivity in how those guidelines are interpreted as well as subjectivity on how individual club owners might vote if it gets to that.

    “I don’t know how to gauge the probability of votes,” Grubman said. “I do know how to look at history and I know in the time that I’ve been associated with the league, the league has made some tough calls to keep teams in their markets and to do things that are quite extraordinary to keep teams in their markets.”

    He cited Minnesota, New England, and New Orleans as examples of franchises where the league was successful in helping to prevent a move.

    If Kroenke did in fact try to move the Rams without approval, Grubman said he had no idea how the league would respond.

    “But I do know there are tremendous tools available,” he said. “There’s a charter and by-laws, and there’s ample authority in the commissioner’s office to make sure that everybody follows the rules.

    “That’s what we are. We’re a league of rules. So having something which is a subjective judgment, subjected to a vote, is very different than having a league without rules.”

    In terms of what kind of penalties Kroenke could face for an unauthorized move, Grubman didn’t want to go there.

    “That’s so far off topic and so hypothetical, let’s pick another time,” he said. “There are going to be recommendations that are analyzed and made. And then there’s gonna be votes, but everybody’s gonna follow the rules.”

    If Kroenke plays by the rules and somehow gains approval from the league to relocate, what are the alternatives for St. Louis? Is there another path to get another team here, such as San Diego or Oakland — franchises that also have stadium issues and could potentially relocate to Los Angeles as well? Grubman didn’t offer much hope there for St. Louis.

    “I view that as such an undesirable path to take that I haven’t even thought about the probabilities,” he said. “Because you not only have to do all the hard work that you’re already (doing), then you’re gonna have to convince somebody that this is the market that they want to go to as opposed to some other market, or some market that they can stay in.

    “The objective is to give the St. Louis Rams the best opportunity to be healthy in this market.”

    #16729
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator


    Rams need to follow NFL process to move to L.A.: stadium panel chief

    By Sam Farmer

    http://www.latimes.com/sports/nfl/la-sp-nfl-stadium-20150117-story.html#page=1

    Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II, chairman of the NFL’s stadium committee, had a simple message this week for St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke, who has announced plans to build an 80,000-seat football venue in Inglewood: Not so fast.

    “There are still cards to be played,” Rooney told The Times in his first public comments since Kroenke unveiled his vision for a state-of-the-art stadium on the Hollywood Park site. “There’s still a process that has to work its way out, and we don’t know what the outcome’s going to be yet. That’s why we have league committees and approval processes.”

    Rooney’s words were measured but his message was clear that the NFL is going to make the decisions on stadiums and relocation.

    “I think we’re comfortable that we could stop a team legally from moving if it didn’t go through the process,” Rooney said.

    The NFL does not have a strong track record in blocking teams from relocating. The only instance in the modern era of a team moving to a new city, then reversing its decision after pressure from the league, came in 1996, when the Seattle Seahawks set up operations for one week in Anaheim. But Ken Behring, who owned the team at the time, immediately moved back to Seattle when then-Commissioner Paul Tagliabue threatened to fine the franchise.

    In all other cases, teams that have moved have either been successful in litigation or have reached settlements with the league enabling them to stay. However, since the Raiders and Rams left Southern California after the 1994 season, the NFL has strengthened its relocation guidelines, and won a legal battle with late Raiders owner Al Davis regarding his claim he owned the rights to the L.A. market.

    Rooney said he wanted to clarify the league’s position after reading the comments of Dallas Cowboys ownerJerry Jones that Kroenke would be able to unilaterally move the Rams without league approval. Under NFL bylaws, such a relocation would require a three-quarters-majority vote of the 32 team owners.

    “I don’t agree with Jerry on that point,” Rooney said. “The majority view is that there’s a process the teams are going to have to go through, and I think everybody understands that in terms of the teams that may be interested, I expect that the process will be observed, and hopefully it will be an orderly process.”

    The Rams have not indicated they intend to circumvent the league’s relocation process. Team officials declined to comment.

    In a New York Times story on Monday, Jones said Kroenke had the ability to move his team even if the league attempted to block him.

    “As it would turn out now, apart from the league saying no, you can move there,” Jones said. “Keep in mind that teams have moved without the permission of the league. They just have.”

    In a separate interview with The Times, Jones said any relocation would be a league decision, but added: “It always was and always will be the decision of the individual to take the risk, pull the trigger, and give his energy and talent through the franchise. That’s the real decision maker. And we’ve got a guy that’s made the decision to be involved in some way in Los Angeles, and that’s Stan Kroenke.”

    The Rams, San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders are all unhappy with their current stadium situations and have the yearly option to get out of their leases. L.A. is held up as a relocation option. Chargers owner Dean Spanos contends his club would be significantly damaged if another franchise moved to L.A., where he said at least one-quarter of his season-ticket holders live. He has said he would attempt to block any team from moving there, something that would require nine no votes from fellow owners.

    The counterargument is that Spanos, who has worked 13 years to find a stadium solution in San Diego, has had his chance to make an aggressive move for L.A. yet hasn’t taken it. What’s more, the NFL has controlled the process for two decades and there is still no team in the market. In December, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell informed teams the league would not be accepting relocation applications in 2015, meaning the earliest a team could be in the L.A. market is 2016.

    If three teams apply for relocation, but there are only two vacancies in L.A., one of those franchises would have to go back to the city it tried to leave, with severely diminished leverage for getting a new stadium.

    “That’s why we have a process and why it’s incumbent on the league’s committees and league staff to manage the process so that, to the greatest extent possible, we exhaust the possibility of a team remaining in its home market,” Rooney said. “We don’t want to have a team that gets itself in a situation where it has to file an application and go through a process where at the end of the day it could wind up being a lame duck, or even worse, having to go back to a city it attempted to move from.”

    Rooney also said a team that moves to L.A. must have a solid stadium plan in place, one that has cleared all the required political, environmental impact and financial hurdles.

    “I don’t think any of us are interested in having a team moving to a temporary facility without any of us understanding what the ultimate permanent location is going to be,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons why we put the relocation process on hold and closed the window this year.”

    Officials in St. Louis have met repeatedly with the NFL in recent months in New York and St. Louis, and the stadium proposal they unveiled last week was designed in part to persuade the league that a good option exists for the Rams to stay put. If St. Louis can execute its plan, said Dave Peacock, a local business leader who’s heading the project, the league rules stipulate the city should keep its team.

    “The NFL bylaws are very clear,” Peacock said. “I believe in those bylaws, and I have confidence that we’re an NFL city. We hope the Rams are playing here for a long time.”

    The league has also been in negotiations with AEG about a potential deal at Farmers Field, a proposed downtown stadium next to L.A. Live. In the 20 years since the Raiders and Rams left, the NFL has fostered the idea of competing sites to get the best deal. Rooney said that continues to be the case.

    “I think next year is a time frame that I would hope that we at least go through a site-selection process and at that point are in a position where we have a site where we’d all feel comfortable putting a stadium,” he said. “Then we’d be ready to go through a relocation process where we all understand that there’s a first-class NFL stadium for a team to move to.”

    #16733
    Winnbrad
    Participant

    So I read through all of these posts. I still don’t get it. But it’s early on a Saturday, and I’ve only had one cup of coffee. Help me, please.

    Suppose Stan says, “I’m moving to LA”. What can anyone really do about it?

    Can the other owners fine him? Stan could just not pay it.

    The NFL isn’t gonna kick the Rams out of the league, no matter what their owner does.

    So what penalty, that can be enforced, could the league impose on Stan? It would have to be something involving money, because I can’t see any other way of punishing an NFL owner. But what do I know?

    #16734
    bnw
    Blocked

    The NFL could refuse to play the Rams. Doubt it would ever get to that.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

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