I don't think that's quite right. He said: "We've never said it is our preference to move to Los Angeles."
Do you really believe that? After everything you have seen and heard being done - Do you honestly believe LA is not their Option A?
I don't think that's quite right. He said: "We've never said it is our preference to move to Los Angeles."
The case presented by Georgia was not what happen it was publicity. The Rams had no choice they had to agree to the conditions set by the league. It's right in your quote "which are one-time fees for rights to buy season tickets."; that's advanced ticket sales so subject to revenue sharing with the league and with the players. I will try to find the CBA from then that addressed the shareable revenue streams which were part of the numbers used for the salary cap.
I said the relocation fee was paid by St Louis. PSL's were collected by CVC and then distributed to the team.
http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1468&context=sportslaw
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CB8QFjAAahUKEwiW0bqs15HGAhVYGJIKHRvdClc&url=https://www2.bc.edu/~yen/Sports/St%20Louis%20Conv%20v%20NFL.doc&ei=pcJ-VdbqEdiwyASbuqu4BQ&usg=AFQjCNEhpAgIPLpoVkDN8T9SoA3pbds5vQ&sig2=tqYfnOon7GaUHBp0TKJufA
This is rubbish. PSLs are not ticket sales, try to get in a game with a PSL.
You refuse to acknowledge that you were wrong about the additional millions so it's no longer worth discussing.
You have hundreds of posts in a few months and less than a dozen not in this thread. I smell an agenda and not an honest one.
I'd have to fully agree that the Rams haven't met relocation guidelines at all. (For the second time in a row). Where I slightly disagree is how much that is going to matter. I hope it does as much as those articles suggest.
http://www.101sports.com/2015/06/15/six-reasons-to-believe-the-rams-will-stay-in-st-louis/
Six Reasons to Believe the Rams Will Stay in St. Louis
Posted by: Randy Karraker in National Football League, Uncategorized June 15, 2015
2) The NFL’s relocation guidelines have changed. There’s a belief that this race to Los Angeles between the Rams, Raiders, and Chargers can be compared to the franchise free agency of the 1990’s, but there is no comparison. The only real guidelines in place back then were to go to the league and tell them you were moving. The NFL was afraid of the costs of anti-trust suits from the teams the league feared it would lose. After the Colts, Cardinals, Rams, Raiders, Browns, and Oilers switched cities, the NFL implemented their current guidelines. Those measures that Trask spoke of weren’t in place, not to mention all the hoops a franchise must jump through now.
The last thing the NFL wants is to set a precedent and open the door to more franchise moves simply because an owner wants to make more money for himself. Some think those guidelines won’t apply, but I believe longtime owners want to avoid the chaos of the late 90’s.
First off - keep it civil. Calling something a poster says "rubbish" is akin to saying they are full of shit.This is rubbish. PSLs are not ticket sales, try to get in a game with a PSL.
You refuse to acknowledge that you were wrong about the additional millions so it's no longer worth discussing.
You have hundreds of posts in a few months and less than a dozen not in this thread. I smell an agenda and not an honest one.
There was no relocation fee the move was rejected. Georgia offered 26 million so do you think 3 million more would have change votes from owners who didn't get anything from the fee. The other fact is that the NFL sets the relocation fee not the owner so it doesn't matter. If Kroenke offered 100 million and then the NFL said 250 million would you say the same thing no because the league is the one that determines it.
PSL gives the holder the right to purchase a ticket and as such are considered advanced ticket sales.
Go read the CBA because PSL's are considered revenue if not used for stadium construction. This is from the CBA at the time.
(x)(1) Without limiting the foregoing, except as specified in subsections (x)(2) through (x)(7) below, DGR shall include all revenues from Personal Seat Licenses (“PSLs”) received by, or received by a third party and used, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of, the NFL or any Team or Team Affiliate, without any deduction for taxes or other expenses. Such revenues shall be allocated in equal portions, commencing in the League Year in which they are received, over the remaining life of the PSL, subject to a maximum allocation period of fifteen years; provided, however, that interest from the League Year the revenues are received until the League Years the revenues are allocated into DGR shall be imputed and included in DGR, in equal portions over such periods, calculated on an annual compounded basis using the Treasury Bill rate published in The Wall Street Journal of February 1 during the League Year in which the revenues are received. Each equal portion of PSL revenues allocated into DGR, plus an equal portion of the imputed interest specified above, shall be referred to as the “Maximum Annual Allocation Amount.” (x)(2) To the extent that PSL revenues are used to pay for the construction of a new stadium or for stadium renovation(s) that increase DGR (regardless of whether the stadium is owned by a public authority or a private entity (including, but not limited to, the NFL, any Team or any Team Affiliate)), and if such PSL revenues have received a waiver of any League requirement of sharing of “gross receipts,” then such PSL revenues will not be included in a particular League Year in DGR or in Excluded DGR. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the maximum exclusion of PSL revenues each League Year from DGR shall be equal to any increase in DGR that directly results from such stadium construction or renovation (including through any spillover from Excluded DGR) as calculated in subsections (x)(3) through (x)(7) below.
I'd have to fully agree that the Rams haven't met relocation guidelines at all. (For the second time in a row). Where I slightly disagree is how much that is going to matter. I hope it does as much as those articles suggest.
I have to agree with this. I've asked multiple times specifically what has changed and can't recall it ever being answered beyond vague references of being more difficult for owners to go rogue.The relocation guidelines are almost the same as they were in 1995. The only major change is in regards to the home market notification and the requirement for local meetings. Amy Trask talked about the changes after the Raiders moved to LA and the relocation guidelines along with the fines that were put in place in 1984. The changes were both in effect in 1995.
PROCEDURES FOR PROPOSED FRANCHISE RELOCATIONS
Article 8.5 of the NFL Constitution and Bylaws vests in the Commissioner the authority to
"interpret and from time to time establish policy and procedure in respect to the provisions of the Constitution and Bylaws and any enforcement thereof." Set forth below are procedures and policy to apply to League consideration, pursuant to Section 4.3 of the Constitution and Bylaws, of any proposed transfer of a home territory. These provisions were established in December of 1984 and remain in effect.
Section 4.3 requires prior approval by the affirmative vote of three-fourths of the member
clubs of the League (the normal voting margin for League business) before a club may transfer its franchise or playing site to a different city either within or outside its home territory. While the following provisions apply by their terms to a proposed transfer to a different home territory, a transfer of a club's playing site to a different location within its home territory may also raise issues of League-wide significance. Accordingly, the pre-Annual Meeting notification date prescribed in section (A)(1) tjelow also applies to a proposed intra-territory relocation, and the Commissioner may require that some or all of the following procedures be followed with respect to such a move.
A. Notice and Evaluation of the Proposed Transfer
Before any club may transfer its franchise or playing site outside its current home territory, the club must submit a proposal for such transfer to the League on the following basis:
1 . A club proposing a transfer outside its home territory must give written notice of the proposed transfer to the Commissioner no later than 30 days prior to the opening date of the Annual Meeting in the year in which the club proposes to commence play in a new location. Such notice will be accompanied by a "statement of reasons' in support of the proposed transfer that will include the information outlined in Part B below.
2. The Commissioner will, with the assistance of appropriate League committees, evaluate the proposed transfer and report to the membership; if possible, he will do so within 20 days of his receipt of the club's notice and accompanying "statement of reasons." The Commissioner may also convene a special committee to perform fact finding or other functions with respect to any such proposed transfer.
3. Following the Commissioner's report on the proposed transfer, the transfer will be presented to the membership for action in accordance with the Constitution and Bylaws, either at a Special Meeting of the League held for that purpose or at the Annual Meeting.
B. "Statement of Reasons" for the Proposed Transfer
Any club proposing a transfer outside its home territory must, in its accompanying "statement of reasons," furnish information to the Commissioner essential to consideration of whether such a move is justified and whether it is in the League's interest.
In this connection, the club proposing to transfer must present in writing its views to why its recent financial experience would support a relocation of the club. Such information would include a comparison of the club's home revenues with League averages and medians; past and projected ticket sales and other stadium revenues at both the existing and proposed locations; and operating profits or losses during the most recent four seasons. The club should also comment on any other factors it regards as relevant to the League's consideration of the proposed transfer, including but not limited to operations of other professional or college sports in the existing and proposed home territories, and the effects of the proposed transfer on NFL scheduling patterns, travel requirements, current divisional alignments, traditional rivalries. League-wide television patterns and interests, the quality of stadium facilities, and fan and public perceptions of the NFL and its member clubs.
To permit such a review, at least the following information will accompany the "statement of reasons" for the proposed transfer:
1 . A copy of the club's existing stadium lease and any other agreements relating to the club's use of its current stadium (e.g., concession agreements, box suite agreements, scoreboard advertising agreements) or to a stadium authority's or municipality's provision of related facilities (e.g., practice facilities).
2. Audited financial statements for the club for the fiscal years covering the preceding four seasons.
3. An assessment of the suitability of the club's existing stadium, costs of and prospects for making any desired improvements to the stadium, and the status of efforts to negotiate such improvements with the stadium authority.
4. A description and financial analysis of the projected lease and operating terms available to the club in its proposed new location.
5. A description and financial analysis of the stadium lease and operating terms available to the club in its existing home territory, on a basis that permits comparison with the projected arrangements in the proposed new location.
6. A budget projection, using accepted League charts of account, showing a projected profit and loss statement for the fiscal years covering the first three seasons in the proposed new location.
C. Factors to be Considered in Evaluating the Proposed Transfer
While the League has analyzed many factors in making expansion and team-move decisions in the past, the Commissioner will also give consideration to the factors listed below, among others, in reporting to the membership on any proposed transfer outside a home territory. Such factors were contained in a bill reported by a Senate committee in 1 984; they essentially restate matters that the League has considered vital in connection with team location decisions in the past. Accordingly, any club proposing to transfer should, in its submission to the Commissioner's office, present the club's position as to the bearing of these factors on its proposed transfer, stating specifically why such a move is regarded as justified on these standards:
1 . The adequacy of the stadium in which the team played its home games in the previous season, and the willingness of the stadium or arena authority to remedy any deficiencies in such facility;
2. The extent to which fan loyalty to and support for the team has been demonstrated during the team's tenure in the existing community;
3. The extent to which the team, directly or indirectly, received public financial support by means of any publicly financed playing facility, special tax treatment and any other form of public financial support;
4. The degree to which the ownership or management of the team has contributed
to any circumstance which might otherwise demonstrate the need for such re-
location;
5. Whether the team has incurred net operating losses, exclusive of depreciation
and amortization, sufficient to threaten the continued financial viability of the
team;
6. The degree to which the team has engaged in good faith negotiations with appropriate persons concerning terms and conditions under which the team would continue to play its games in such community or elsewhere within its current home territory;
7. Whether any other team in the League is located in the community in which the team is currently located;
8. Whether the team proposes to relocate to a community in which no other team in the League is located; and
9. Whether the stadium authority, if public, is not opposed to such relocation.
Any club proposing to transfer will have a full opportunity to state its position to the membership and to make its case for the proposed transfer. In order to fully assess a proposed transfer in light of the variety of League interests involved, and to fairly resolve the interests of all parties, it is essential that the membership be fully apprised of the relevant facts with respect to any proposed transfer. The procedures and policies outlined above are directed to that end.
Others will continue to think their POV is the right one regardless.
How will the L.A. populous react to a team that hasn’t had a winning season in eleven years and had the worst five year stretch in history? Can you really trust them to get it right?
Pretty much, honestly the only team that probably meets the guidelines are the Raiders, and that's only because they're so cash strapped they've gotten to the point where they just put up their hands and say "We'll do whatever with whoever will help us".
Only 6 months to go....