ELF ready to play

Last August the third reboot of the XFL was announced with a 2022 restart date, but ongoing collaboration talks with the Canadian Football League have put that launch on hold.

In December, 2018, Ricky Williams formed the Freedom Football League, but more than two and a half years later the FFL has yet to play a game.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @scottscribe60

And Major League Football? Hoo boy … founded in 2014, the MLF is entering its seventh consecutive season to not take the field.

So today I want to salute the European League of Football, born on November 4, 2020. While there are countless sports organizations that don’t make it past the announcement stage, the ELF looks as though it’ll go from introduction to market in just over seven months.

Multiple player signings are taking place each day and all eight flagship ELF teams are already on practice fields ahead of next month’s regular season kickoff.

The eight franchises are divided into the North and South divisions. The Berlin Thunder, Hamburg Sea Devils, Leipzig Kings and Panthers Wroclaw compete in the North, while the Barcelona Dragons, Cologne Centurions Frankfurt Galaxy and Stuttgart Surge comprise the South.

The regular season is 10 games over 12 weeks (June 19 through September 5), with each team playing its division foes twice in a home-and-home setup as well as two opponents from the other division using the same format.

Playoffs will take place September 11-12 and the championship game is set for September 26.

“When I was on the line with the Sea Devils, we had some thrilling duels,” ELF Commissioner Patrick Esume, who has NFL as well as NFL Europe coaching experience, said. “Berlin and Cologne are cities with a long-lasting football history and, of course, with target groups of fans who have waited 14 years for this moment. And additionally I also see a great potential with Leipzig as a new franchise location.”

The league is trying to form an historical bridge to its predecessor, which started as the World League of American Football before becoming NFL Europe and finally NFL Europa. Aside from reviving old franchise locales and nicknames (Sea Devils, Thunder, Dragons, Centurions and Galaxy), it hopes to serve as a developmental league for the NFL. However, unlike the original circuit – which stocked rosters mostly with NFL cuts – ELF will go primarily with homegrown players.

Based on information posted in March, two United States imports per team may be on the field at the same time, four are allowed on game day rosters, and 10 additional foreign athletes can be signed.

This week Leipzig inked a pact with wideout Yoshihito Omi, captain of the Japanese National Team, while Hamburg secured a deal with Danish kicker Phillip Friis Andersen, who spent time with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2019.

“We do not claim to copy NFL Europe, where the teams consisted of fully professional Americans and a few Europeans,” Esume told the Stuttgarter Zeitung newspaper. “Rarely have these Europeans been local heroes. We turn this construct around and put the local heroes in front … that’s important for us. And because our CEO (Zeljko Karajica) comes from this business as the CEO of Pro 7 Sat 1 (a German media company) and who once brought the NFL to Germany as a TV product, he is as convinced as I am that the fans have a different connection to the franchise when you have local heroes on the teams.”

Just as I like the ratio rule in the CFL that requires a majority number of “national” players on each roster, I think doing something similar in ELF is a great idea. I look forward to following European players and seeing how many become bona fide stars and move on to a higher level.

More importantly, fans in franchise cities should enjoy cheering for athletes they’re familiar with.  

But I’m also hopeful that – over time – this league becomes stable and provides fans of alternative football a football alternative worth following. In his interview with Stuttgarter Zeitung, Esume says expansion is already on his mind, with the ultimate goal to reach 24 teams.

“In Germany there are more than 65,000 people who play football – it’s the biggest European football country – so it’s obvious that we begin here,” he said. “London really wants to be a part of it. We want to gradually take the focus away from Germany and establish ourselves throughout Europe, like the Champions League in soccer.”

I have no clue how high the level of play in ELF will be this summer, and frankly am not that concerned about it – especially in Year One. Entertaining games are played at various skill levels, and if the fans enjoy what they see, they’ll keep coming back for more.

“The expectation is huge,” Esume said. “With Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, Stuttgart, Leipzig, Barcelona and Wroclaw, we have a very attractive field of participants. I expect all teams to play at a high level and expect exciting duels at eye level.”

I hope that’s the case. And unlike other leagues that exist in name only, it looks like we actually will get to see what the ELF has to offer in just over a month.

PSFL was late to the party

Any time a new professional football league is formed in the United States, officials backing the venture will explain that they are trying to “fill a void.” Rarely, however, do they come along when that void has already been filled.

The Professional Spring Football League did just that, though, announcing its entrance into the sports scene just four months after the World League of American Football had completed its inaugural season.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @scottscribe60

Unveiled on October 1, 1991, at Gallaghers Steak House in New York, PSFL commissioner Rex Lardner (former programming director for Turner Broadcasting) billed it as a can’t miss venture.

“Two things will make this league successful while others failed,” Lardner told the Herald-News of Passaic, New Jersey. “Keeping control of expenses through the league office, that is, coordinating all the funds to the teams through the league office so that we protect the owners from each other.

“And also a really strong regionalization concept due to our territorial draft.”

This was the single entity concept before the single entity concept was cool. Not only did the two versions of the XFL operate under that business model, Major League Soccer still does, along with Major League Rugby. So, Lardner and league founder Vincent Sette were visionaries in that regard.

But why try to compete with another spring league that was funded by the NFL and had national television contracts with both ABC and the USA Network?

“We will make it a shorter game and affordable to everybody,” Lardner said. “We don’t have the global concept of the WLAF. We are looking to draw only about 20,000, maybe 25,000 per game that first year.”

But no new sports league had ever survived without major TV contracts, and the PSFL had none.

“We think we have television,” Lardner insisted. “I’ll work with every franchise in getting local television and radio. Then maybe go after regional cable, maybe semi-national cable. Realistically, we’ve got to walk before we sprint.

“Television is just not the end-all of this league.”

In something of an upset for a spring upstart, this league didn’t just disappear after its introductory news conference. By the time the calendar flipped to 1992 all systems were go, with a 16-game regular season set to start on February 29 (three weeks before the WLAF embarked on year two).

The team lineup consisted of the Arkansas Miners, Carolina Cougars, Miami Tribe, Nevada Aces, New England Blitz, New Mexico Rattlesnakes, Oregon Lightning Bolts, Tampa Bay Blitz, Utah Pioneers, and Washington Marauders, each with 45-man rosters.

The average salary per player was projected to be in the $30,000 per season range, and they were all hoping to lead their team to the championship game on July 5 – the Red, White and Blue Bowl at RFK Stadium in Washington.

The PSFL also had some coaching star power with Craig Morton leading Oregon and Steve Grogan guiding the fortunes of New England.

What it didn’t have, however, was TV. Nor did it have enough teams in major markets to interest any network.

I assume you know how this story ends.

On February 13, 1992, the Professional Spring Football League suspended operations with Lardner saying it needed $1 million to stay afloat. On March 2 it officially folded – with 700 players who had participated in training camps still unpaid.

“We made our decision to suspend this season because we lost so much time getting everything together,” Sette told the Tampa Tribune. “There was a problem with the economy and we moved at too fast a pace.”

Sette said he hoped the league would be able to reform and launch in 1993 but, of course, that didn’t happen. And that’s too bad because the WLAF went on hiatus from 1993-94, once again leaving that spring void that demands to be filled. Instead, the PSFL was null and void before ever playing a game.

What if …

For now at least, that European Super League nonsense is off the table. Ultimately it was halted by thousands of angry supporters who believe world football competitions should be based on sporting merit, not cherry-picked by billionaires with enough expendable income to form their own private club. It didn’t hurt that the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) threatened to boot teams from their domestic leagues and bar players from World Cup and other tournaments.

The owners of the clubs have been properly shamed, and the Super League is back to being a bad idea instead of a bad reality.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @scottscribe60

Still, all this got me thinking …

How would American fans react if the game they’re most passionate about went rogue? Just for fun – knowing it could never happen – let’s say 12 NFL owners decided to break away and form a new American football Super League in the spring.

According to Forbes the most valuable franchises in 2020 were the Dallas Cowboys, New England Patriots, New York Giants, Los Angeles Rams (those four are worth at least $4 billion), San Francisco 49ers, New York Jets, Chicago Bears, Washington Football Team, Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans, Denver Broncos, and Las Vegas Raiders. For our purposes, we’ll make them Super League members (although as a Jets fan I realize the word “Super” hasn’t been associated with Gang Green for more than half a century).

The NFL Super League would be divided into three, four team pools: The Giants, Jets, Patriots and Eagles in Pool A, Cowboys, Bears, Football Team and Texans in Pool B, and Rams, 49ers, Broncos and Raiders in Pool C.

Pool play would be round robin (six games per team) with the playoffs contested single-elimination style among the three pool winners and wildcard team.

Using my format, the NFL Super League would span eight weeks in April and May.

Is it ridiculous?

Oh, yeah.

It’d be difficult for a cyborg to make it through a year-round football season, much less a human. And of course the NFL would never allow anything that didn’t involve all 32 of its cash cows.

But that’s not really my point – I’m thinking more about the perception of it all.

The 12 soccer renegades in the Super League (AC Milan, Arsenal, Atletico Madrid, Chelsea, Barcelona, Inter Milan, Juventus, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur) weren’t leaving their domestic leagues either – they were just creating a closed, big-money extravaganza outside of their regular season fixtures and other annual events. That’s what enraged supporters.

This NFL Super League would be (theoretically) doing the same thing. So when news broke about a norm-busting soccer series involving iconic clubs, I wondered how such an earth-shattering decision would be received by pro football fans. I assume that – unlike sports enthusiasts in Europe – Americans would be wildly excited about a gridiron super league, with TV ratings rivaling those of traditional playoffs. Sure, fans of the franchises left out would bitch and moan, but they’d be bitching and moaning while watching. And the reason they’d be watching (me included) is because those of us in the United States are conditioned to accept the franchise model.

According to Market Watch, the NFL is the most profitable sports league on the planet, raking in $13 billion annually. And teams don’t belong to a city or the citizens of a city (Green Bay being the notable exception). You might live in Atlanta and identify with the Falcons, but make no mistake – they belong to Arthur Blank, not you.

NFL owners will do what they want with little regard to the fan base, whether that’s threatening to move to another city unless they get a palatial new stadium or actually using moving vans and doing so in the middle of the night. That’s why, for example, the Baltimore Colts are now the Indianapolis Colts and Oakland Raiders are the Las Vegas Raiders. A team might have a rabid, loyal fan base, but if an owner sees a better deal elsewhere he or she will pursue it. That’s how the world of the NFL turns and it has long since been accepted by those of us who follow tackle football.

It’s not, however, how European association football fans view their clubs because for them there is a real sense of ownership – sometimes literally. The leaders of the potential Super League clubs tried to tear a page from their peers across the pond, but underestimated how deeply ingrained these teams are to the culture and fabric of their cities and citizens. Roots run deep, and traditions span generations.

The beauty of global soccer is that any club – regardless of how far down the pyramid – has a path to reach the summit of the sport. Because results are the most important criteria, the smallest club can win its way to the top tier of soccer, raising the hopes and spirits of its community along the way. It’s a massive party, and everyone’s invited.

In the NFL, however, that’s not the case. We pay money to watch the franchises play, but those franchises are playing for the NFL, not us. It controls the dance and the dancers – and we’re perfectly happy to be wallflowers.