CFL and Mexican league form intriguing relationship

The Canadian Football League is doing a great job remaining a topic of conversation even though it won’t play another game again for six months.

Scott Adamson’s sports column appears pretty much whenever he feels like writing it.

The 2018 season ended on November 25 with the Calgary Stampeders defeating the Ottawa Redblacks, 27-16, in the Grey Cup.

But there has been all sorts of major news off the field.

The implementation of a non-player football operations cap has forced some teams to trim their coaching staffs (and prompted some coaches, like Hamilton defensive coordinator Jerry Glanville, to leave for “personal reasons”).

The cap is in place so that more money can be freed up to increase player pay and help prevent possible defections to the Alliance of American Football, which begins play in February. The CFL’s collective bargaining agreement expires in mid-May and players want an increase in their salary cap and league minimum salary.

Currently the league minimum is $54,000, and with the AAF (and, coming in 2020, the new XFL) promising salaries of roughly $75,000 for a 10-game season, the threat of losing players to upstart leagues is real.

New head coaches have taken over at British Columbia (DeVone Claybrooks), Hamilton (Orlando Steinauer), and Toronto (Corey Chamblin), meaning a third of the league’s teams are under new leadership.

Arguably the biggest news, of course, is that a 10th franchise is almost a done deal: it looks like football fans in Halifax, Nova Scotia, will be cheering for the Atlantic Schooners as soon as 2021.

That’ll give the CFL a coast-to-coast wingspan.

However, the working relationship the CFL has entered into with a Mexican tackle football league is also potentially significant. And even though that announcement is lost in the spotlight somewhat, it intrigues me a bit.

Starting in 2019, the Liga de Futbol Americano Profesional (LFA) will join the Canadian league in a partnership designed to develop players.

“We started this conversation about what we could do to grow the game of football in Canada and in Mexico,” CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie said during his annual state of the league news conference. “We could work with our players to welcome the best players from Mexico into the CFL and then find opportunities for Canadian players; maybe those that are coming out of college or junior that aren’t quite ready yet, to give them the opportunity to go and play professional football in Mexico, (to see) if we could share resources and learn from one another.”

Hmmm … a CFL feeder league in Mexico?

Now that would be interesting.

“We have a lot to learn from a league that is about to celebrate the 106th edition of its championship,” LFA commissioner Alejandro Jaimes said before the Calgary-Ottawa clash. “And we are confident that there is much we can offer.”

Canadian college players have limited options. The highest level of university ball there is the 27-school U Sport, which is divided into four conferences.

A few stars wind up in the National Football League, but otherwise those who don’t get drafted and signed by CFL teams are often out of luck. Now a few more might have a chance to hone their craft further down the continent.

Conversely, there is a tentative plan to have at least one Mexican player on each CFL roster every season.

The CFL and LFA are planning a CFL scouting combine for LFA players in Mexico in January, ahead of the Mexican league’s spring start.

Currently the LFA has eight teams in two conferences, and is best described as semi-pro. Still, its games are broadcast on television and has developed a strong following. It’s a growing league.

“We’ve got some of the best football coaches in the world and if we could get our football coaches interacting with our partners in Mexico that would be very positive,” Ambrosie said.

This partnership is expected to lead to CFL games being played in Mexico, although I doubt you’ll ever see the league actually place franchises there.

Expansion south of the border failed once, and expansion even further south seems unlikely.

Still, Ambrosie says perhaps the time will come when the LFA might be on equal footing with their Canadian counterparts.

“Someday, teams from the LFA could compete with their CFL counterparts,” he said. “But we have a lot of work to do, and learn first. This is a wonderful opportunity to develop a plan that we can use to create positive alliances with more leagues, in more than 30 countries where this sport is practiced.”

I think best-case scenario would be an LFA that is one day shaped in the image of the CFL, which could result in exhibition games.

An even more daring proposal would be to have the LFA expand into the United States and create a Mexican-American Football League, although admittedly that’s just wishful thinking on my part.

I’ve already stated my case for the American League of Canadian Football in an earlier column.

https://adamsonmedia.com/out-of-left-field/the-american-league-of-canadian-football/

I’m glad the CFL continues to try and grow its game. Stepping over the U.S. to put a footprint in Mexico is bold, but it opens up a whole new world of possibilities.

New XFL promises ‘less stall and more ball’

The original XFL – made for TV and dripping with a pro rasslin’ influence – was killed on May 10, 2001. The brainchild of World Wrestling Entertainment overlord Vince McMahon, the one-and-done spring league is best known for over-the-top gimmicks, sloppy football and Neilson ratings that hit record lows.

Scott Adamson’s sports column appears pretty much whenever he feels like writing it.

But McMahon went back to the drawing board – or laboratory, if you will – and on December 5, 2018, the XFL rose again.

McMahon, who unveiled the eight flagship franchises on Wednesday during a news conference in New Jersey, says this XFL has learned from its predecessor’s mistakes and is in business for the long haul.

The fact that he’s reportedly sunk $500 million into the endeavor certainly shows his commitment.

“A lot has changed in the years since we announced the first XFL, but what hasn’t changed is people’s love for football,” McMahon said. “And there’s a financial commitment for the long term. I think we’ll be presenting a more innovative and more exciting (style of) play.”

McMahon appears serious about making the new venture all about football and nothing about wrestling, and that’s a smart move. And planning this far in advance will hopefully mean teams won’t be hastily thrown together as they were during the first go-round.

Oliver Luck is the league’s commissioner, and yesterday’s presser suggests he’ll be the face of a circuit vastly different from the sometimes sleazy original.

In other words, there will be no more cheerleader locker room cams, bump-and-grind dance teams and double entendres from announcers.

“We’ll be family-friendly with a good, solid in-game experience for fans,” Luck said. “And we want it to be affordable for families, more affordable than other professional sports leagues.”

There are only two original XFL markets in the rebooted league – New York and Los Angeles (which also happen to be the nation’s top TV markets). During the 2001 season, the New York/New Jersey Hitmen were second in attendance with an average of 28,309 fans per game, while the Los Angeles Xtreme was fourth with 22,679 fans attending each home game.

The rest of the 2020 lineup features Dallas, Houston, St. Louis, Seattle, Tampa Bay and Washington, D.C. All eight franchises are owned and operated by the XFL.

Conspicuous by its absence is San Francisco, which clearly had the biggest following in XFL 1.0 with an average of 35,005 fans showing up for Demons home games.

But one of the main takeaways from the announcement is that all teams are placed in major markets and, with the exception of St. Louis, all have NFL teams.

“Combined, these markets comprise nearly a quarter of the nation’s population,” Luck said. “The quality of football is our number one priority and we are doing everything possible to get that right.”

The XFL’s spring counterpart – the Alliance of American Football – begins play this coming February with eight teams but only two (Atlanta and Phoenix) in NFL territories.

Both leagues, however, will be going after the same kinds of players and offer similar money.

AAF players will make $250,000 over three seasons while XFL players will make, on average, $75,000 based on one-year contracts. McMahon has hinted that “exceptional” players could earn much more than that, however.

If the AAF survives its first year, players will have more options outside of the NFL and Canadian Football League going into 2020.

“Hundreds of players are cut from NFL teams every year,” Luck said. “And we plan to invite those players to try out for the XFL.”

(It’ll be interesting to see if the two spring leagues eventually merge, if one puts the other out of business, or if both go belly-up in short order. Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, though, I’m guessing the XFL will closely watch the AAF to see what works and what doesn’t before its teams take the field).

No rule innovations were announced on Wednesday, but Luck said there are many changes in the works.

“We’ve talked about less stall and more ball,” Luck said. “We want to modify the game where it’s familiar, yet distinctive. We will have a game that’s crisp, fast-paced and can be played in under three hours. We’re considering changes to punts, kickoffs, kick returns, extra points and the play clock.”

And while the original XFL tried to brand itself as “tougher” than the NFL, there are no such ridiculous claims this time around.

“We want fewer interruptions and improving player safety is a top priority of ours,” Luck said. “We’ve established a health, wellness and safety program.”

Luck makes it clear that the new league is not the enemy of “traditional” football.

“This game will be fan-centric,” he said. “Our research indicates fans want more football, and we want to complement fall football. In the true spirit of reimagining the league, we’ve had conversations with the NFL as well as other former players and officials.”

The league kicks off February 8-9, 2020. Teams will play a 10-game schedule with two playoff games and a championship.

“We’re really looking forward to once again establishing a very exciting, innovative form of football that, quite frankly, we’ve never seen before,” McMahon said.

Stay tuned …

UAB football rises to the occasion

Four wins, eight losses.

Scott Adamson’s sports column appears pretty much whenever he feels like writing it.

That was my prediction for UAB’s first year back from the gridiron crypt and, really, that would’ve been fine.

When I sat at Legion Field on the first Saturday in September, 2017, I was so thrilled the Blazers had returned that wins, losses and even performance didn’t matter a whole lot.

I figured UAB would win that game – against Football Championship Subdivision foe Alabama A&M – and then somehow manage to get three more before the 12-game season reached its end.

Football Bowl Subdivision schools that lose their program don’t just come back and compete, not when they’ve been out of the game for two years.

But UAB proved me wrong last season, going 8-5, winning every game it played at Legion Field, and earning a Bahamas Bowl berth.

I couldn’t have been prouder, and couldn’t have been more pleased to be so wrong.

At least I thought I couldn’t.

Because on Saturday, when the final seconds ticked away on a 27-25 Blazers victory over Middle Tennessee that secured the 2018 Conference USA championship, I was even more proud – and wrong again.

Oh, I had high hopes for another good season that included a postseason, but league title?

Come on.

Not two years out of the grave.

But here they are, sitting on 10 wins and prepping for MAC champion Northern Illinois in the Boca Raton Bowl on Dec. 18.

“We talked about when we brought this group in, the joke was who was going to play us in the movie, because you know there is going to be a movie someday, and then it was how do we want this movie to end,” UAB coach Bill Clark said during the postgame news conference on Saturday. “We wanted the movie to end with a championship.”

When UAB president Ray Watts pulled the plug on the football program on this date four years ago, it was supposedly because it was a money-losing proposition.

“As we look at the evolving landscape of NCAA football, we see expenses only continuing to increase.” Watts said. “When considering a model that best protects the financial future and prominence of the athletic department, football is simply not sustainable.”

But a lot of us wouldn’t accept that (yes, I’m raising my hand, here) and the Birmingham business community galvanized behind UAB football.

Give us a chance to be competitive, we said, and we’ll make it worth your while.

Saturday’s outcome was an object lesson in faith.

“I think the city of Birmingham and UAB, the people believed in this,” Clark said. “I mean, we raised $50 million to bring this program back. This is a thank you them, too. All of those people who really gave their own personal money, to believe in us and get us in a facility where we would have a chance to compete.”

Throughout its history, Blazer football has been hamstrung by a University of Alabama system board of trustees that didn’t want it and certainly had no desire to help it.

Enough people got to together, though, to take that decision out of their hands.

Now there’s an operations building and practice facility that any Group of 5 program would be proud of.

A new stadium is on the way.

Clark is a coach who, thanks to a contract extension the day before the league championship game, is being paid closer to what he’s worth.

And players who decide to wear the green and gold do so because they want to be part of something special, not because they have no place else to go.

For the first time, the UAB football program is in a position to succeed.

Four years after having no future, the future has no limits.

“I was a high school coach and my dad was a high school coach, and that’s really what I want to see from them is taking these things and saying, ‘OK, if I work really hard, if I believe in something, good things can happen,’” Clark said. “That’s what happened with this group, they believed in each other.”

It’s easy to believe, now.

And I don’t believe I’ll ever predict a 4-8 season again.