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http://www.latimes.com/sports/nfl/la-sp-0408-nfl-stadium-scenarios-20150408-story.html#page=1



The Southwestern setting at the Arizona Biltmore was casual, but the billionaires and multimillionaires weren't — most dressed in coats and ties for three days of closed-door sessions..

The 32 NFL owners were getting serious about an issue the league has largely treated as an afterthought for two decades: The lack of a professional football team in the Los Angeles market.

There was an air of inevitability that a solution was at hand.

The owners heard a detailed, hourlong update on the Inglewood stadium proposal and the competing vision for Carson. Owners who once deflected questions about L.A. with a shrug or smirk gave thoughtful, informed and optimistic answers.

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, a member of the league's committee on Los Angeles opportunities, predicted two teams in L.A. by next year.

"We have some real good options," Kraft said. "And now we'll see what happens in the end game."


NFL probably won't vote on L.A. stadium proposals for six months

John Mara of the New York Giants, also on the committee, didn't commit to the idea of two teams, but indicated that a return is imminent.

Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who is bullish on the Inglewood stadium, said, "A deal is in the crosshairs."

The NFL has never been closer to returning to L.A. In the past, venues were pitched by people who didn't own teams. This time, owners themselves are backing the stadium proposals.

"The developers can do all they want, but until the owner of a team wants to go out there, it's not going to happen," said the New York Jets' Woody Johnson at the owners' annual March meeting.

St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke has released plans for a futuristic stadium on 298 acres at Hollywood Park in Inglewood and he has the required entitlements to start construction this year.


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San Diego Chargers owner Dean Spanos and Oakland Raiders owner Mark Davis want to build on 168 acres just off the 405 Freeway in Carson, and they are weeks away from obtaining the same entitlements.

The Rams, Chargers and Raiders are unhappy because their current stadiums are outdated and — in the case of the Chargers — crumbling. All three teams are on year-to-year leases, making it easier to move.

"We have a good chance of getting back to Los Angeles soon, but I cannot speculate on exactly who, how or when," said NFL Executive Vice President Eric Grubman, appointed by Commissioner Roger Goodell to oversee the L.A. market. "There are too many variables that we don't control, so if you guess now, you have a high probability of being wrong."

Carson proposal 2015


Show Captionx

Carson proposal 2015

(Scott Boehm / Manica Architecture)

The new NFL football stadium proposed by the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders would be built on a 168-acre site at the southwest quadrant of the intersection of the 405 Freeway and Del Amo Bouleva



Carson proposal 2015



Show Captionx

Carson proposal 2015

(Manica Architecture)

A rendering shows a new NFL football stadium proposed for Carson by the owners of the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders.

Carson proposal 2015


Show Captionx

Carson proposal 2015

(Manica Architecture)

A rendering of the new football stadium proposed for Carson by the owners of the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders.


Inglewood proposal

Show Captionx

Inglewood proposal

(G.F.Bunting)

Taxes from a football stadium and a performing arts center, along with new tax money generated by a large shopping center and office buildings, would pump $670 million into Inglewood's general fund over the next 25 years, if projections pan out. Above, a rendering of the proposed project.


Champions plaza


Show Captionx

Champions plaza


An artist's rendering of the proposed new Inglewood stadium.

The league has said no teams will relocate for this season, but has left open the possibility of one or two teams moving to L.A. for 2016. The two-month window to submit a relocation request is January through February, although the NFL has discussed accepting applications earlier to give teams more time to move.

The three markets in danger of losing their teams have made varying degrees of progress to keep them.

St. Louis has developed plans for a $985-million stadium on the banks of the Mississippi River, and is exploring how to acquire the land and $400 million in public money to subsidize the project.

San Diego has identified a site near the Chargers' current stadium and a task force appointed by the mayor is expected to present a financing plan by May — although team officials are not optimistic they will get public support to subsidize construction.

The Raiders are still waiting to hear from the developer representing the city of Oakland and Alameda County; indications are that a viable proposal is a long-shot.


If the owner of the San Diego Chargers had hitched his wagon to the proposal sponsored by Farmers Insurance, he'd have, if not gotten the upper hand, at least pulled up alongside the owner of the Rams. Unlike Carson (huh? where's that!?), Downtown LA has a lot of visibility and a...


With three teams and two stadium concepts in play in the L.A. metropolitan area, there are more than two dozen possible outcomes, although some are implausible, such as both stadiums being built or all three teams playing in one venue.

Here are nine that merit discussion.

Inglewood gets built

Rams alone

Why it can work: Kroenke, the NFL's second-richest owner, doesn't need a second team to help him and his partners finance a $1.8-billion stadium at the site of the old Hollywood Park racetrack. The development would include a small concert hall, residences, restaurants, and office and retail space, similar to LA Live around Staples Center.

The Rams would have the best chance to be successful in a one-team, one-stadium situation — they have a nostalgic connection to L.A., having played in Southern California from 1946 to 1994, and still have fans here.

Kroenke's site could host a Super Bowl, and be a potential home for such league assets as NFL Network, the Pro Bowl and a West Coast Hall of Fame.

Carson NFL stadium plan report projects $500-million spending boost


Carson NFL stadium plan report projects $500-million spending boost

Why it can't work: St. Louis has done the most of the three cities to keep its team. If the $400 million in taxpayer money remains in the stadium proposal there, the NFL will be reticent to allow the Rams to leave that cash behind.

Also, Spanos has made it clear that he thinks having a team in L.A. would hurt the Chargers in San Diego. If he can assemble eight other owners to vote with him — three-quarters of the 32 NFL owners must approve any relocation request — he could block Kroenke's move.

Outlook: Strong likelihood.

Rams, Chargers together

Why it can work: This is an outcome the NFL could live with if both the Rams and Chargers can't close deals with their cities. Putting a second team in Inglewood gives that stadium greater financial viability.

The Raiders have more options where they can move. The team has discussed relocation with San Antonio officials. They conceivably could share Levi's Stadium with the San Francisco 49ers. Or the Raiders could go to St. Louis if the Rams were to leave.

Why it can't work: This would require Kroenke and Spanos to reach agreement to share a stadium, something they have not shown a willingness to do.

Before Kroenke joined the Hollywood Park project, the developer initially approached the Chargers but they were not interested. The Chargers like the easy freeway access of the Carson site and believe fans care most about their ability to get to and from a game as quickly as possible.

Outlook: Somewhat likely.

Rams, Raiders together

Why it can work: Raiders owner Davis has an affection for the Hollywood Park site, where his father, Al, wanted to build a stadium in the early 1990s. Informal surveys show the Rams are the most popular of the three teams in the L.A. market, followed by the Raiders.

The Oakland team is not in good financial shape and would be more open to make a deal with the Rams.

The TV networks would have an NFC and AFC team in the market, so divisional realignment would not be necessary.

Why it can't work: Spanos would put up a vigorous fight to block any moves to L.A., other than his own. Two teams would saturate the L.A. market and the Chargers' threat to move to L.A. would give the team little or no leverage to get a stadium deal in San Diego.

Outlook: Less likely.

Kroenke as landlord

Why it can work: The NFL would get a stadium and location it likes, even if the Rams don't move. The Chargers and/or Raiders could move to the L.A. market without having to build a venue.


Stan Kroenke, Roger Goodell

St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke, left, speaks with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell during a break at an NFL owners' meeting in Washington on Oct. 8, 2013. (Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press)

Why it can't work: If Kroenke were going to build the most expensive NFL stadium in history, he would want to reap the benefits of being in the market. There have been plenty of opportunities for the Chargers and Raiders to be tenants in other proposed L.A. stadiums, and they didn't jump at those.

Outlook: Unlikely.

Carson gets built

Chargers, Raiders together

Why it can work: This solves two of the league's biggest stadium problems, and avoids pulling a team out of Missouri to play in Inglewood, making the Rams the fourth NFL franchise in California.

Many owners are sympathetic toward Spanos and if he fails to get agreement soon on a new stadium, they would likely feel he has met the league requirement to exhaust all options.


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The Raiders, too, face long odds of getting any significant traction on a new stadium in the Oakland area. They would have a 50/50 stake in a Carson project.

The NFL knows this Carson site and previously considered buying it. The stadium would be conveniently located for fans from both L.A. and Orange County, and would have ample room for tailgating.

Why it can't work: The site was once a toxic landfill, and although much cleanup work has been done, there remains more to do. The Chargers and Raiders also have different ideas about how a stadium should look. Both teams are in the AFC West and putting rivals in the same stadium would have its own challenges, such as divisional realignment, TV network issues, and two fan bases that don't like each other.

Outlook: Somewhat likely.

Chargers alone

St. Louis County taxpayers no longer on hook for planned Rams stadium

St. Louis County taxpayers no longer on hook for planned Rams stadium

Why it can work: Spanos has said the Chargers would shoulder the Carson project on their own if the Raiders strike a deal in Oakland or decide to pull out.

Why it can't work: Financing a stadium on 10 games a year, with no surrounding development, plus paying an NFL relocation fee, would be quite a challenge for Spanos. The Rams and Raiders are not going to bow out of the L.A. competition unless their own stadium problems are fixed.

Outlook: Somewhat likely.

Raiders alone

Why it can work: The Raiders would get their new home, and St. Louis and San Diego would keep their teams.




If the owner of the San Diego Chargers had hitched his wagon to the proposal sponsored by Farmers Insurance, he'd have, if not gotten the upper hand, at least pulled up alongside the owner of the Rams. Unlike Carson (huh? where's that!?), Downtown LA has a lot of visibility and a...



Why it can't work: The NFL believes that the Raiders, among the league's most polarizing teams, would struggle to generate the necessary revenue to pay for a stadium, especially when it comes to attracting the support of corporations and premium customers.

It's highly unlikely the league would hand over the L.A. market to Mark Davis — his late father, Al Davis, famously sued the NFL over who owned the rights to L.A. — and the younger Davis has shown no inclination to sell the franchise.

Outlook: Unlikely.

Wild cards

One team, new series
A year ago, when the league was investigating the possibility of financing its own stadium in the market, there were discussions about creating a "Los Angeles Game of the Month" franchise, in which a new L.A. stadium would not only be home to a relocated team but a monthly neutral-site game, akin to the London series.

Why it can work: The league could sell separate personal seat licenses for a Game of the Month series, and possibly a separate TV package. A personal seat license is a one-time payment, lasting a prescribed period such as 10 years, to secure the right to purchase tickets for a specific seat for future events. A game-of-the-month system would be a way to create two-team economics for a one-team stadium.

Why it can't work: If you call something the Game of the Month, it implies that it's going to be a compelling matchup. What cities that have elite teams would be willing to give up home games?

There's a reason why Jacksonville is often the home team for London games. The Jaguars' ticket revenue for a London game is significantly higher than for a typical regular-season home game, and that's not the case with top teams.

As it is, teams volunteer to give up home games for neutral-site games; they are not mandated to do so.

Outlook: Unlikely.

No moves in 2016

How is this possible? The league clearly is in no hurry to rush into an unfavorable deal in L.A. Much of what transpires during the next several months will hinge on what the home markets propose. If no team relocates in 2016, it could happen in 2017, however. After 20 years… it's still early in the game.

Outlook: Strong likelihood.

sam.farmer@latimes.com

Twitter: @latimesfarmer
---------------------------------------------------------


Could the NFL be looking at the Browns to move ?

Last edited by DawgFace; 04/08/15 11:39 AM.

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It's going to be the Raiders and Rams. St. Louis and San Antonio will be the new cities used to con current cities into building new stadiums.

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I think they predicted two teams to be there by this year, last year.

Seems to me the league is baiting the table to play the Fear Card... I'm betting that they have a couple of cities they are trying to get new stadiums from.


Browns is the Browns

... there goes Joe Thomas, the best there ever was in this game.

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Originally Posted By: cfrs15
It's going to be the Raiders and Rams. St. Louis and San Antonio will be the new cities used to con current cities into building new stadiums.


I think that the Chargers will be one of the teams to move to LA. They can make the case that another team, or 2, moving to LA would damage their market, and along with the fact that their stadium is falling apart around them, makes them a natural answer to the question of who moves.


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I'm not at all sure the LA Area would support one team let alone two. They were unable to retain the Rams or the Raiders.

I can understand the NFL wanting to be in LA but like Purp said, this kinda feels like the NFL putting pressure on other cities like St. Louis, San Diego and Oakland...

IMO, the ONLY team that should move to LA is the Jags. it feels as if they don't have any big loyal following in Jacksonville.


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The NFL wants a team in LA, and in order to make it successful, they will have to make the team's facility into a destination. They are making plans to do just that.


Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.

John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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Like I said, I understand why they want to be in LA. I get it. it could be a real money maker..

I just don't know if LA will support a team. If they had, the Rams would still be there and so might the Raiders.

So what changed?

Anyway, I'm sticking with the only team that should be considered is the Jags


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The NFL couldn't keep the Rams/Raiders there before, what makes them think a team will stick this time around?



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Originally Posted By: MrKelso
The NFL couldn't keep the Rams/Raiders there before, what makes them think a team will stick this time around?


Revenue.


Am I the only one that pronounces hyperbole "Hyper-bowl" instead of "hy-per-bo-le"?
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Originally Posted By: MrKelso
The NFL couldn't keep the Rams/Raiders there before, what makes them think a team will stick this time around?


By the "NFL," do you mean "two nutty owners?"

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What if the team is bad? Does anyone actually think fans will still fill the building on Sunday's and support the team? I wonder how much logical thinking is going into the thought process. I've never been to L.A. so I just wonder how loyal and passionate their sports fans ACTUALLY are.



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The Lakers are terrible. They regularly sell out games.

The Dodgers were near the top of the league in attendance when Frank McCourt was their owner.

Both the Kings and Ducks sell tons of tickets.

The Angels do very well.

The Clippers survived despite being run by the worst owner in pro sports.

It is hard not to sell tickets when there, at least, 15 million people in the surrounding area.

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Of course the owners want a team in L.A. The relocation fee is believed to be $500 million. That's right...


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At the rate the Browns keep re-booting...maybe Haslam takes the money and his circus to LA. Cleveland Browns football will be back in 2018. Can't be any worse than the rate they're going now. LOL


The Browns finally have a leader in the building. It won't be long before Jim Schwartz is in charge. Thankfully.
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Originally Posted By: The Beast
At the rate the Browns keep re-booting...maybe Haslam takes the money and his circus to LA. Cleveland Browns football will be back in 2018. Can't be any worse than the rate they're going now. LOL


I don't think that's possible. He has a stadium lease that I think prohibits him from moving the team.


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Hell, offer up the Browns...I shouldn't wish this "PATHETIC" franchise even on LA.
1950-1995 Cleveland Browns R.I.P.

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so you want the team disbanded and set to another town... no more Cleveland browns?


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A wise person knows whether or not to say it.
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Originally Posted By: SuperBrown
Hell, offer up the Browns...I shouldn't wish this "PATHETIC" franchise even on LA.
1950-1995 Cleveland Browns R.I.P.


Try 1945 to 1995..


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So, let's just rearrange the NFL divisions


AFC East

Patriots
Jets
Giants
Eagles


AFC South

Dolphins
Titans
Buccaneers
Falcons


AFC Central

Browns
Bills
Colts
Bengals


AFC West

Broncos
Chargers
Raiders
Seahawks


NFC East

Ravens
Steelers
Panthers
Redskins


NFC South

Saints
Cowboys
Texans
Chiefs


NFC Central

Packers
Lions
Vikings
Bears


NFC West

Rams
Cardinals
49ers
Jaguars


Assuming the Jags and Rams move to LA


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Fun to discuss. I don't see the Steelers moving from our division. I could see the Ravens in a east division.


Browns, Bengals, Bills, Steelers.

If we needed to balance out a bit, I would love to see the Bills move east and bring Nashville back in to the division.



Nashville is a GREAT roadtrip.


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This article contradicts your opinion:

Quote:
Pro Sports Face Soured Market Los Angeles: Unfulfilled Promised Land
July 16, 1995|By Peter Schmuck and Jon Morgan | Peter Schmuck and Jon Morgan,Sun Staff Writers

Anaheim, Calif. -- There was no midnight ride. The Los Angeles Rams spent much of June packing up the trucks for their long-anticipated move to St. Louis. The Los Angeles Raiders were not far behind, announcing soon thereafter their intention to move back to Oakland and give up sole football claim to the second-largest sports market in the United States.

How can this be? NFL training camps are opening everywhere . . . . everywhere but in Los Angeles and Orange County, a massive metropolitan area that once made sports moguls from other parts of the country drool with envy.

The Rams left for a sweeter stadium deal. The Raiders left for similar reasons, although there were other factors that contributed to their decision to reoccupy the Oakland/Alameda County Coliseum. Regardless of the specific circumstances, the willingness of both teams to move is symptomatic of a dramatic change in the sports environment in Southern California -- a region once viewed as the promised land for major-league teams.

"I suspect that Los Angeles is such a gigantic place that people thought they could go there and you are bound to get somebody to come to your games," said John C. Phillips, a University of the Pacific professor and author of "The Sociology of Sports."

History has proved otherwise.

To be sure, the NFL has temporarily deserted Los Angeles, in part for reasons unique to the NFL. Its teams get so much money from network TV that ticket sales and local media rights -- revenue sources that are dependent on large population bases -- are less important.

And revenue-sharing rules strongly favor teams that can raise money from sky boxes, club seats and luxury concessions, amenities the Rams and Raiders will find in their new digs.

But attendance figures for all eight major-league teams in Los Angeles and nearby Anaheim during their most recent seasons suggest a remarkable fan apathy. Of the eight, only two -- the Dodgers and hockey's Mighty Ducks -- exceeded league averages for per-game attendance.

Most weren't close: The Rams and NBA's Clippers were one-third below their respective league marks, and the Angels ,, were off 25 percent. A short-term blip? Rams attendance was off 30 percent from 1990 to 1995. Angels attendance has been in decline since 1989. And even the Dodgers are well below their historic highs.

More than wins, losses

It's not just performance, either. The Angels, who once owned the American League single-season attendance record, are struggling to lure fans to watch a club that has been in first place for much of the season. The Lakers, once the hottest sports ticket in Southern California, were the fifth-worst-drawing team in the NBA this past season, even though a rebuilding effort paid off with an overachieving young team.

Even the Dodgers, whose attendance is the envy of many in baseball, have lost their league-leading rank to teams playing in new stadiums. And the Dodgers finished first in their division last season.

There's no simple reason for the sports malaise in L.A. People in and around sports cite several factors, from an awful transportation system and lack of a focused downtown to the abundance of beaches, mountains and other things to do in the region. And the area that gave the world daredevil skateboarding and roller blades may prefer participatory to spectator sports.

Moreover, the growing fascination of sports teams for new, publicly financed stadiums -- an economic necessity in a world of $200 million franchises -- comes at a bad time for the battered California economy, and to a bad place. Southern California is the birthplace of America's modern anti-tax movement.

The late Walter O'Malley shocked the sports establishment in the 1950s when he engineered the deal that resulted in both the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants moving to the West Coast, but he could see that the nation's westward expansion was only beginning.

The Dodgers' move for the 1958 season was followed two years later by the NBA's Minneapolis Lakers. A year after that, expansion brought the Angels. The NHL's Kings, an expansion franchise, came in 1967.

In less than 10 years, L.A. had gone from one major-league team -- the Rams, who moved from Cleveland in 1946 -- to five.

In 1982, the Raiders moved down from Oakland, and in 1984, the Clippers moved up from San Diego. The NHL added the expansion Mighty Ducks in 1993.

Boom to bust

"It was a gold mine," said Pennsylvania State University sports historian Ron Smith. Population and wealth were growing quickly, and air transportation had evolved to where a team could play in Los Angeles one day and New York the next.

The gold rush created its own problem: overkill. Before the Rams and Raiders announced they were leaving, there were eight major-league teams squeezed into a geographical rectangle that measures just 15 by 25 miles.

http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1995-07-16/sports/1995197187_1_attendance-teams-in-los-rams

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I wonder when the Media is going to tie us moving to LA???


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I don't think they will.

It's not reality, just because posters on this board want to act like the media is picking on the Browns. It's just an inbred excuse to cover the errors this FO has made.

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Not totally. There has been a degree of mob mentality.


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Originally Posted By: cfrs15
Originally Posted By: MrKelso
The NFL couldn't keep the Rams/Raiders there before, what makes them think a team will stick this time around?


By the "NFL," do you mean "two nutty owners?"


I think people are quick to forget the how and why those two teams left LA. I don't think the fans were blameless, but they weren't the top 2-3 reasons each team left. If you give them a new stadium, they'll have almost no reason to ever leave.

The size of that TV market is too good to pass up.


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Originally Posted By: texaslostdawg
so you want the team disbanded and set to another town... no more Cleveland browns?

From 1999 can you actually admit we have had a competent team? No. Don't give me the 2002, 2007 Browns. Nothing to see there.

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Originally Posted By: SuperBrown
Originally Posted By: texaslostdawg
so you want the team disbanded and set to another town... no more Cleveland browns?

From 1999 can you actually admit we have had a competent team? No. Don't give me the 2002, 2007 Browns. Nothing to see there.


Yep. Leave now. Let's see the new version in 2018. I'm down for a three year break from this garbage.


The Browns finally have a leader in the building. It won't be long before Jim Schwartz is in charge. Thankfully.
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Quote:
I'm down for a three year break from this garbage.


Then take that break. It's that easy.


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Yeah lets cut the baby in half...that's the solution. Really? End football is not the solution cause wah wah we have been a sorry ass team since 1999.

Lets just win! this put me out of my misery and sell the team cause NFL football without the Cleveland Browns is better than with it??? Really - there is no football for me if that happens. I'll go back to teaching little kids on Sundays rather than root for another team. NFL Football would be over and this is from a guy who lived one year in Cleveland back in 1964 but I'm loyal - ask my wife of 33 years. Just like I had a choice to follow the Baltimore Browns...and chose not too...then got the news we would have our own team back in 99. Its hard starting from scratch...why these cities/owners steal other teams rather than apply for expansion.

But that void in 95-99 was terrible. TO wish for that Black hole back is selfish. You wish to leave the fandom of this team...fine but to Cut the baby in half as the solution. Sorry you lost me there. Keep in mind I didn't read every post I've avoided this thread mostly cause I have no opinion on it. So if I am wrong in what was said...apologies. wink


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Originally Posted By: SuperBrown
Originally Posted By: texaslostdawg
so you want the team disbanded and set to another town... no more Cleveland browns?

From 1999 can you actually admit we have had a competent team? No. Don't give me the 2002, 2007 Browns. Nothing to see there.


Oh, I agree the team has been pitiful, no doubt , no argument.

Guess I just feel a Sunday with Browns football, no matter how bad is better than a Sunday with no browns football at all...

You (and others it seems) what the town to no longer have a team, that's your prerogative... but why? So you no longer have a team to root for , so you can go root for a team with a better chance? Basically you have given up hope and I am sorry to see that ... understand it... just sorry.

Me... I don't want that.. I want to be able to come to C Town once a year with my son and sit the Pound and cheer for my team, his team... when we kicked squealers arse last year and saw it live... his excitement was more fun for me than the win itself....guess that sounds stupid, but it is what it is and to borrow a line from Vers ( sorry bud) I don't care what anyone else thinks about it.

Need a break... Peace.


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With the team or without the team is PAIN.

As usual, you peeps take me a little too serious. The question is about PAIN.

The Browns are PAIN, either way. With or without.

The Pain and the Factory of Sadness continues... willynilly

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Well 7 weeks last year I had nothing but Glee (except when Mack got hurt), we even had a November that we were relevant in talks of the post season.

Hoping for more weeks, and then more weeks the next season. Till finally its a given most weeks will be happy ones.

The time will come - I'm not all or nothing with this regime meaning I would give up...but I think we got the right guys at the right time.

jmho


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There was a gleam in 2002, 2007 and 2014.
That's about it in 16 years.
Oh, and there was one in January of 1987 albeit brief.

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You're right, but the two best parts of the team were Shanny [by a landslide] and Hoyer. They are both gone.

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Originally Posted By: The Beast
At the rate the Browns keep re-booting...maybe Haslam takes the money and his circus to LA.


If Tennessee doesn't want to swap, and/or the name-change language among other things don't get agreed upon, then other options will always be explored by Jimmy and his current stepping-stone starter franchise.

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I don't think the NFL owners would approve of Cleveland moving again.


We don't have to agree with each other, to respect each others opinion.
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Originally Posted By: FloridaFan
I don't think the NFL owners would approve of Cleveland moving again.



We Cleveland fans sell out the stadium whether we go 7-9 or 3-13. Why would you want to leave for a city that has lost two other NFL teams because of no support???


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Better to reign in hell, than. . . .

Browns at home still rock.


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Originally Posted By: berea
Originally Posted By: The Beast
At the rate the Browns keep re-booting...maybe Haslam takes the money and his circus to LA.


If Tennessee doesn't want to swap, and/or the name-change language among other things don't get agreed upon, then other options will always be explored by Jimmy and his current stepping-stone starter franchise.


I actually believe the uniform change and putting Cleveland on the front of the uniform shows a solid commitment to remaining in Cleveland.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Originally Posted By: berea
Originally Posted By: The Beast
At the rate the Browns keep re-booting...maybe Haslam takes the money and his circus to LA.


If Tennessee doesn't want to swap, and/or the name-change language among other things don't get agreed upon, then other options will always be explored by Jimmy and his current stepping-stone starter franchise.


I actually believe the uniform change and putting Cleveland on the front of the uniform shows a solid commitment to remaining in Cleveland.


Uh, clearly.. putting Cleveland on the jerseys, and Browns on the pants.. Means they plan on moving the team and changing its name as soon as possible..

They're just trying to lul us into a false sense of security..


Am I the only one that pronounces hyperbole "Hyper-bowl" instead of "hy-per-bo-le"?
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