Atlantica - 01.03.2004, Blaðsíða 16

Atlantica - 01.03.2004, Blaðsíða 16
14 A T L A N T I C A They've come to Europe to chase a dream. Unlike their com- patriots who hit the continent in droves during the summer – lugging backpacks and riding trains from country to coun- try – these athletes don't have Eurail passes stuffed in their fanny packs. No, they've come to play football. American football. They play for teams named the Galaxy or the Centurions in the hope that they can impress the scouts and one day wear the uni- form of the Cowboys or the Raiders. They play an American game in half-filled stadiums while most Europeans are fanatically fol- lowing the race between Manchester United and Arsenal. American sports fans won't be tuning in to the games because, come spring, they've started their annual love affair with baseball. Welcome to the NFL Europe League (NFLEL), where finely tuned athletes play: the “other football”. DEVELOPING TALENT The NFLEL is essentially a minor league, a training camp, a place where vagabond journeymen, college studs who didn't get drafted or players who found their names on the waiver wire come to prove that they have the skill to play in the US's National Football League, known as the NFL. "Everybody who plays on one of the teams knows what we're here for," says Ralf Kleinmann, a 32-year-old kicker for the Frankfurt Galaxy, winner of last year's World Bowl, NFLEL's cham- pionship game. "We want to move on into the big league." For the most part, the players sweating it out in Europe during the spring are from the States. Upwards of 75 per cent of the league is made up of Americans; the rest are called nationals, essentially any player not from the States. Like Kleinmann, who is German, most nationals come from Europe, but the league also has players from across the globe, countries like Japan, Mexico and Australia. But just because NFLEL is a development league doesn't mean the athletes are not world-class. NFLEL says that a total of nine players with NFLEL experience took the field in last year's Super Bowl (the NFL championship game), including Jake Delhomme, the starting quarterback for the Carolina Panthers, who back in the 1998-99 season led the Galaxy to victory in the World Bowl. "Playing for Frankfurt Galaxy was great," said Delhomme, before his Panthers lost to the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XXXVIII. "It's what a young quarterback needs: getting the chance to prove yourself on the field. That's why the NFL Europe League is so important." A TOUGH SELL The league started in 1991 and was originally called the World League of American Football, with ten teams playing in Europe, the US and Canada. The league was backed by the NFL, but folded in '93-'94 due, in part, to the major expense of flying teams back and forth from Europe to the States for games. After a two-year hiatus, the league returned as an all-European league. In '98, it was renamed the NFL Europe League. Despite the NFL's active participation to promote football inter- nationally, and despite the talent level, NFLEL still struggles to find its fans on a continent where soccer rules. Just ask the Barcelona Dragons. On second thought, there's nobody in the Dragons' front office because the franchise folded last year. "It's a tough sell," says Kerstin Ehry, the marketing manager for the Frankfurt Galaxy. To market the sport, Ehry has engineered some creative events, such as the traffic-jam promotion when the team sent cheerleaders to areas of Frankfurt where traffic comes to a standstill every morn- ing. The cheerleaders showed up with coffee and croissants. This year the team plans to sponsor an event where fans can win a date with a cheerleader. "We create an entertainment world around the sport," Ehry says. At times it seems like football is secondary. Take a Galaxy home game where normal attendance is upwards of 35,000. Before each game, the team sponsors what they call a "Power Party". The party, starting around 3 pm, is essentially a massive tailgater with barbe- ques, coolers full of beverages and, of course, lots of cheerleaders. After the party, fans head to the stadium for a pre-game show. The game finally starts at 7, running to about 9. That's about seven hours of entertainment, only two of which are spent playing foot- ball. Oh, and each game follows a particular theme - Hawaiian or High Noon. If you saw the film starring Gary Cooper, you can pic- ture the cheerleaders decked out in cowboy hats with spurs around their ankles. "We give people more for their buck," says Ehry. While fans might get more for their euro, the sport still lags behind soccer. "Soccer always has been and will be the most popular sport in Europe, [but] football can have success," says Kleinmann. "It is The Other FOOTBALL EUROPEANS ARE SLOWLY CATCHING ON TO AMERICAN FOOTBALL THANKS TO THE NFL EUROPE LEAGUE. BUT ON A CONTINENT WHERE SOCCER REIGNS SUPREME, CAN FOOTBALL COMPETE, ASKS EDWARD WEINMAN. 007 Airmail ATL 204 19.2.2004 15:45 Page 14
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Atlantica

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