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May 19, 2016 at 1:42 am #44301znModerator
NFL owners poised to award Los Angeles a Super Bowl next week in Charlotte
Vincent Bonsignore, Los Angeles Daily News
When the Rams and Raiders bolted Los Angeles 22 years ago, it left L.A. with more than just a glaring hole relative to a National Football League team presence.
It also meant the second-biggest market in the country was no longer allowed to host the Super Bowl.
So for the last two decades, the City of Angels has merely been an observer rather than a participant to the single biggest sports event in the world.
That is about to change, big time.
In fact, by this time next week the NFL is expected to officially bring Los Angeles back into the fold by awarding L.A. either Super Bowl LIV (2020) or LV (2021) when owners gather in Charlotte to decide the hosting responsibilities for Super Bowls LIII, LIV and LV.
The game changer, or course, was the Rams being approved last January to relocate from St. Louis to Los Angeles, where they will eventually play in the $2.4 billion stadium and entertainment hub being built by owner Stan Kroenke in Inglewood.
And the NFL isn’t wasting any time taking tapping back into the entertainment capitol of the world.
Upon approving the Rams return home, the NFL immediately added Los Angeles to the host ballots for Super Bowl LIV an LV, along with Atlanta, South Florida and Tampa Bay.
The NFL will also decide among New Orleans, Atlanta, South Florida and Tampa Bay for Super Bowl LIII in 2019.
Houston and Minneapolis have already been approved as host sites for Super Bowls LI and LII in 2017 and 2018.
Now, it’s L.A.’s turn.
“We are excited by the possibility of the Inglewood Stadium bringing a Super Bowl back to Los Angeles,” said Rams Executive Vice President of Football Operations & Chief Operating Officer Kevin Demoff. “The owners have five good choices to consider next week and we are glad to be part of the process.”
Almost from the moment the Rams were given the green light, the wheels were in motion to secure hosting rights to the Super Bowl.
The Rams teamed up with Wasserman Media Group CEO Casey Wasserman and Kathy Schloessman of the Los Angeles Sports & Entertainment Commission, among others, to formulate the Los Angeles proposal the NFL will take under consideration next week.
“There has been extensive work done to present an exciting Los Angeles bid. The cities of Inglewood and Los Angeles have come together with a terrific partnership that allows the region to put its best foot forward,” said Demoff. “That could not have happened without the leadership of Stan Kroenke, the efforts of Casey Wasserman and his team and the talents of Kathy Schloessman and the staff at LASEC and LA Tourism.”
The smart money is on owners approving L.A. to host either Super Bowl 2020 or 2021.
“Absolutely,” is how a high-ranking NFL executive answered when asked if Los Angeles will win one of the two bids.
L.A. has hosted seven previous Super Bowls – including the first one ever at the L.A. Coliseum – and is well positioned to welcome all that comes with a Super Bowl.
“L. A. is already attracting a record number of tourists and visitors, and the Super Bowl would make an enormous impact on our economy bringing tens of thousands of people to our city and generating hundreds of millions of dollars for local hotels, restaurants, shops and other businesses,” said Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.
To put in perspective what a Super Bowl means financially to the hosting city and state, a study completed by the Seidman Research Institute, W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, determined that Super Bowl XLIX and related events two years ago in the Phoenix area produced a gross economic impact of $719.4 million for the entire state.
L.A. wants a piece of that pie.
“Los Angeles isn’t just ready for the Super Bowl — we’re built to host it,” Garcetti said. “And once the stadium in Inglewood is completed in 2019, we’ll finally be able to bring it back where it belongs.”
The NFL apparently agrees.
In fact, some provisions were made to potentially accommodate an L.A. Super Bowl as soon as possible.
The league typically stipulates a new stadium must be up and running for at least two seasons before it becomes eligible to host a Super Bowl. The Rams new home in Inglewood is scheduled to open in 2019, which means only a year will have gone by before Super Bowl LIV.
That is one of the issues open for debate when owners gather in Charlotte on Tuesday for a full day of meetings and discussion, culminating with a nationally televised vote in which Los Angeles will learn its Super Bowl fate.
Here is how the format works:
NFL Senior Vice President of Events Peter O’Reilly and his staff will present an overview of each city’s bid followed by a 15-minute presentation by each city.
Team officials and owners are not allowed to participate in this phase.
Wasserman will chair the Los Angeles bid and make the official presentation to owners.
Afterward, the owner from the team in each of the bidding cities will have up to five minutes to make a one final pitch for their city.
Once that phase is completed, fellow owners will have an opportunity to ask questions.
The Q and A is followed by the actual vote, which will be televised by the NFL Network.
The winning bid ultimately requires 24 votes, and with Los Angeles competing against three other cities.
If in the first vote, one city does not receive the necessary 24 or more votes, the list of the eligible cities will be reduced to the top three plus ties for third, or if there are no ties for third, all cities within one vote of third
If after the second vote, no city has received the necessary 24 or more votes, the list of eligible cities will be reduced to the top two and any ties.
There will be a maximum of one vote to achieve the necessary 24 or more vote for an award when the list is reduced to the top two and ties. If after one vote, no award has been made, the requirement to be selected will be reduced to simple majority vote. Voting continues until an award is made.
L.A. is counting on NFL owners sending the Super Bowl back to its birthplace.[
May 19, 2016 at 3:04 am #44303ZooeyModeratorNFL owners poised to award Los Angeles a Super Bowl next week in Charlotte
See, that’s what happens when Deborah Wasserman Schultz is put in charge of Super Bowl nominations.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by Zooey.
May 19, 2016 at 9:30 am #44306bnwBlockedProbably the site of Die Hard 7. Yippy ky yay StanK!
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 20, 2016 at 10:09 am #44383znModeratorLA Will ‘Absolutely’ Host an Upcoming Super Bowl
An NFL official predicts the new Rams stadium will be chosen next week to host the game in 2020 or 2021
http://la.curbed.com/2016/5/19/11711128/super-bowl-los-angeles
Rumors that the NFL stadium rising in Inglewood will host a Super Bowl in the near future began swirling almost as soon as the league allowed the Rams to return to Los Angeles in January. Now, with team owners meeting Tuesday to vote on host cities for Super Bowls LIII, LIV, and LV, it looks increasingly certain that those rumors will become reality. A high-ranking NFL official tells the LA Daily News that Los Angeles will “absolutely” be chosen to host a Super Bowl as soon as 2020.
The Rams stadium, expected to be complete by 2019, is competing against stadiums in Atlanta, South Florida, and Tampa Bay for hosting responsibilities for Super Bowls LIV and LV, to be held in 2020 and 2021. The fact that Los Angeles is in the running to host the 2020 event at all is an extremely encouraging sign. The NFL appears to have changed a longstanding rule that requires stadiums to operate for two years before hosting a Super Bowl, with LA’s bid specifically in mind.
The very first Super Bowl (which then went by the less auspicious title of the AFL-NFL Championship Game) was held at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 1967. Six more Super Bowls were held in Los Angeles after that, but the city has not had the opportunity to host a game since the Rams left town in 1994. The push to bring the event to Inglewood has been led by Rams owner Stan Kroenke, along with LA Olympic bid mastermind Casey Wasserman and Los Angeles Sports & Entertainment Commission president Kathryn S. Schloessman. Mayor Eric Garcetti has also spoken about the significance of bringing America’s unofficial holiday back to the city after all these years.
As the Daily News points out, the financial impact of hosting a Super Bowl could potentially be enormous. Other cities have raked in billions of dollars when hosting, and Los Angeles businesses are eager to see some of that super money after a drought of more than 20 years.
The signs are all pointing very strongly toward LA hosting one of the two Super Bowls it’s a contender for. Of course, the NFL owners are a fickle bunch, and if the decision process is anything like the soap opera that brought the Rams back to Los Angeles in the first place, it’s anyone’s guess as to what could happen.
May 21, 2016 at 9:32 pm #44453znModeratorWith the NFL back in Los Angeles, Super Bowl can’t be far behind—perhaps as soon as 2020
By Sam Farmer
http://www.latimes.com/sports/nfl/la-sp-nfl-meetings-super-bowls-20160522-column.html
It was early 1993, and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones was in football heaven.
He walked out of a tunnel at the Rose Bowl — site of the seventh and most recent Super Bowl in the Los Angeles area — and into the Southern California sunshine.
“It was one of the greatest memories of my life and certainly of my career,” Jones recalled by phone this week, reminiscing about Super Bowl XXVII, a 52-17 victory by the Cowboys over Buffalo.
“I rode in with the team, and had one of the guys get me a football. There might have been three or four thousand people already there. I walked down to the end zone and it just felt so great. I took that ball and I kind of hopped and skipped in the end zone and just said, ‘Touchdown!’
“There’s a little bit of that feeling,” Jones said, “when I think about having the Super Bowl back in Los Angeles.”
That hasn’t officially happened yet, of course, but it’s likely to come to fruition Tuesday when the league takes the unusual step of naming three Super Bowl host cities in a single day.
“I’d be surprised if we came out of there without L.A. getting one of the three,” Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay said.
The next two Super Bowl sites are set, with Houston playing host to the game capping this season, followed by Minneapolis hosting in its soon-to-open venue. At the NFL’s one-day May meetings in Charlotte, N.C., on Tuesday, owners will decide where their marquee game will be played after the 2018, 2019 and 2020 seasons.
The five cities/regions competing for those games are Los Angeles, Atlanta, South Florida, Tampa and New Orleans.
No one knows for sure until the 32 secret ballots are cast, but a likely outcome is Atlanta getting the first available slot for the Falcons’ new stadium (2018 season, Super Bowl in early 2019), South Florida getting the next one for the Dolphins’ renovated stadium, and L.A. claiming the third opening for the Rams’ Inglewood stadium. That would mean an L.A. Super Bowl in early 2021, giving the Rams two full seasons in their glistening, $2.6-billion home. Tampa and New Orleans are closer to longshots in this process, in part because those cities don’t have new or significantly renovated stadiums.
With the Chargers backing a ballot initiative for a proposed stadium in downtown San Diego, there is also a possibility that the NFL would take the unusual step of guaranteeing a Super Bowl in that city if a new stadium were to be built. Such a guarantee would not name a specific year for a San Diego Super Bowl but could offer a time window for one.
L.A. is also bidding for the game that will be played in early 2020 — it would need a special waiver to get around the NFL’s rule that a new stadium must be open for two seasons before it hosts a Super Bowl — but from the perspective of the franchise building the stadium and surrounding mixed-use development, the 2021 game would be preferable.
“We believe hosting the 2021 Super Bowl, when the stadium has been open longer and the Inglewood campus is more developed, will provide a better experience for the fans and the NFL,” said Kevin Demoff, Rams chief operating officer.
“In this process, though, where all the competing cities have not only put together strong bids but also have a history of hosting multiple Super Bowls, there is always a benefit to having more chances to host.”
The Super Bowl proposals were due April 15, and four of the bidding cities/regions had since last summer to work on them. Because the Rams didn’t get the green light to move until mid-January, however, the NFL didn’t make a request for an L.A. proposal until early March. Therefore, the L.A. bid committee had less than six weeks to put together its pitch.
That bid committee is composed of chairman Casey Wasserman, also spearheading the effort to bring the 2024 Olympic Games to Southern California; Kathy Schloessman and Bob Graziano of the Los Angeles Sports & Entertainment Commission, and Michelle Kerrick of Deloitte. That group, along with the Los Angeles Tourism and Convention Board, worked closely with the cities of L.A. and Inglewood to assemble the bid.
“An NFL team coming back to L.A. was always about more than eight regular-season home games,” Wasserman said. “It was always about the promise of what L.A. and a world-class facility here could deliver in terms of the breadth and variety of events. Obviously at the top of that list is the opportunity to compete for, and hopefully host, a Super Bowl. Hopefully we’ll be able to attract a Super Bowl and it’s the first of many.”
Hosting a Super Bowl is an expensive endeavor, and a city’s bid committee is required to privately raise about $35 million through sponsorships and donations. (Those “partnership packages” entail sponsoring the host committee, not the Super Bowl game, which the NFL owns.) That money pays for a wide range of expenses, including the hotels and practice sites for both participating teams, as well as Super Bowl transportation, security, promotion, accreditation centers and media events.
To make a qualifying bid, a city must ensure at least 22,000 hotel rooms will be available during the peak nights of Super Bowl week. The L.A. bid committee estimates that the week leading up to and including the game would generate at least 100,000 hotel room nights (60,000 guaranteed), which would make the Super Bowl the largest event Los Angeles has hosted since the 1984 Olympics.
Inglewood would be the centerpiece locale of an L.A. Super Bowl, but L.A. Live would be a significant focal point as well.
“We’re spreading the wealth around,” Schloessman said. “We’re not putting all of the activities in one area. We tried to pick venues for these different events that will highlight Los Angeles as the entertainment capital of the world, and will also take advantage of our good weather.”
Jed York, owner of the San Francisco 49ers, said he expects the Inglewood stadium to be “second to none” and an ideal site for the league’s biggest game.
“I think there’s something to be said for city pride, regional pride,” said York, whose team was the host club for Super Bowl 50. “I think it would be really cool to announce that for Los Angeles, whenever they get to host one.”
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