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Stabroek News

NFL strides into the UK
published: Sunday | October 28, 2007


Chelsea manager Avram Grant (left) greets New York Giants football players Eli Manning and Michael Strahan (right) at the Chelsea training ground near London on Friday. The Giants play the Miami Dolphins at Wembley today. - Reuters

LONDON, (Reuters):

AS ENGLAND'S David Beckham helps soccer gain a foothold in the United States, America's favourite football is heading to London's Wembley Stadium with similar intent, aiming to become one of Britain's most popular sports.

The National Football League has already conquered America, with almost every game a sell-out, waiting lists of up to 25 years for season tickets and polls consistently showing its huge appeal.

Britain is its next target, with the Miami Dolphins facing the New York Giants at Wembley Stadium today in the first ever regular season game outside the Americas.

"In the longer-term we have a vision to be a top five sport (in Britain)," NFL UK managing director Alistair Kirkwood said in an interview, with the sport seeking to find a place just behind soccer, rugby, cricket and motor racing's Formula One.

The NFL first gained popularity in Britain in the 1980s when broadcaster Channel 4 began showing games.

The Super Bowl was screened live for the first time in January 1983, featuring the Dolphins and the Washington Redskins, and a series of pre-season games were played at Wembley in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The Dolphins remain one of the most popular teams in Britain, trailing only the New England Patriots, according to the 125,000 registered users of the NFL's British website http://www.nfluk.com.

"For a short period the Super Bowl outrated (soccer highlights show) Match of the Day but then other sports started doing better, re-inventing themselves," Kirkwood said.

Hugely successful

English soccer launched its hugely successful Premier League in 1992, while more recently cricket has found a new format, Twenty20, which has helped the game reach a wider audience.

The NFL in the past three or four years has, however, begun to gain wider coverage and there will be 130 live games on television in Britain this year, more than England's Premier League, Kirkwood said.

Britain's national broadcaster BBC is showing highlights of the Wembley game and live coverage of the Super Bowl.

Kirkwood said one of the keys for the sport to be successful in Britain was to develop local talent. The league will soon sign off on a five-year plan to develop British players.

"We will then have a clear pathway for British players to play in NFL games," he said.

Two British-born players will be in the Giants team at Wembley, kicker Lawrence Tynes from Greenock in Scotland and Londoner Osi Umenyiora who is a defensive end.

The Wembley game was quickly sold out with 87 per cent of the fans coming from Britain and the balance evenly split between mainland Europe and the U.S.

The Giants were hosted in London by English Premier League soccer club Chelsea, while the Dolphins used the facilities of one of the country's leading rugby union teams, London Wasps.

The struggling Dolphins, who have lost all seven of their games this season, will be without running back Ronnie Brown and safety Renaldo Hill.

They suffered torn cruciate ligaments during the 49-28 loss to the New England Patriots on Sunday and are out for the season.

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