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šŸˆ Can An NFL Team Find A London Home?

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This weekā€™s Thursday Night Football features two teams searching for an identity in an intrigui

This weekĆ¢Ā€Ā™s Thursday Night Football features two teams searching for an identity in an intriguing matchup. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In todayā€™s FOX Sports Insider: The Chargers and the Raiders are both searching for something, even if that ā€œsomethingā€ is very different for the two teams ... UNC menā€™s basketball is already setting records ... and the Clippers get another chance to shine in prime time. When they travel to Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum for a Thursday Night Football matchup that has some serious intrigue and potential playoff significance, the Los Angeles Chargers will face a crowd that is firmly against them. The Chargers are used to playing the part of the underdog, but the TNF showcase comes at an interesting time. This is a weird week for the franchise, which recently endured a three-game skid of appalling quality, yet outfired the in-form Green Bay Packers 26-11 last Sunday with a superb performance. Thatā€™s the Chargers. On and off the field, you never know what youā€™re going to get. Coming out of that game was [a bombshell report in]( Athletic]( that a move to London was being strongly considered by both the team and the National Football League, followed swiftly by [an equally bombshell denial]( Can a denial even qualify as a bombshell? Chargers owner Dean Spanos certainly put explosive force behind it, with a string of expletives that left no doubt where his intentions lay. But maybe a move to London would make sense; if not for the Chargers, then perhaps for any NFL franchise that fits the bill. Everything that has gone on with the Chargers (who, letā€™s not forget, were one of the very best teams in football last season) is pretty extraordinary. Itā€™s a team loaded with talent, and a team it seems we should be talking about much more often. Instead, the Chargers only seem to make headlines when there are stories linking them with London, or when wide receiver Keenan Allen complains to The Los Angeles Times about ā€œplaying 16 road games.ā€ Attendance is healthy, but Dignity Health Sports Park is filled with the colors of the rival team each time out. [STORY IMAGE 1] ā€œItā€™s a really tough one,ā€ FOX NFL insider Jay Glazer told me. ā€œItā€™s hard to say how to fix it. ā€œYou have got so much competition, with the Lakers and the Clippers and Hollywood [in general]. Thereā€™s a lot going on. It isnā€™t enough just to be good; you need star power, something to get that market excited. And you need to sustain that over a long period of time. Even the Rams found it hard last year with getting to the Super Bowl. Itā€™s tough to break through.ā€ The current situation, dictating the team will be tenants in a stadium owned and funded by the Los Angeles Rams from 2020 onwards, is far from ideal. Things got good on the field last season, but prospects of a deep playoff charge were dimmed when the 12-4 squad (tied for the AFCā€™s best record) landed only a fifth seed, thanks to the division rival Kansas City Chiefs being equally dominant. And now, days after the London report got everyone talking, they get to play the Raiders (of all teams) on national television (FOX, 8 p.m. ET). The Raiders have also relocated twice already, with another switch on the horizon. But Oakland embraced them when they returned there, Los Angeles refused to forget them, and indications are that Las Vegas is excited for their arrival. How the Chargers must crave something similar. Their temporary home is a 29,000-seat soccer arena which is currently doubling as a road team party zone. [STORY IMAGE 2] Letā€™s, for the moment, get past the notion that London is the perfect get-out for a team in this kind of situation. If anything, London is a prize. If a permanent franchise across the pond happens, whichever owner gets it is likely to be one that has invested hugely, exhausted all legitimate options in its own market and shown it can at least sustain a local following. ā€œThe NFLā€™s long effort to gain a football foothold in England has worked,ā€ [wrote]( [Yahoo Sports]( [national columnist Dan Wetzel.]( ā€œThe league played four games there this year and attracted sellout crowds for all of them. The early Sunday morning television window is a boon. The new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is built NFL-ready, much better than the clunky fit (and small locker rooms) of Wembley Stadium.ā€ Fate, circumstance and reality have piled pain on Chargers supporters for a long time now. Leaving San Diego was a blow for loyalists and for a city that has one remaining major league franchise: baseballā€™s Padres. With the city of Los Angeles so overrun with sports franchises and a London NFL fan base eager to find some team to throw its support behind, perhaps moving them further away from their original home might actually be a boon. Logistics pose some kind of a problem, although perhaps a little less than has been made out. Travel from the east coast is barely any different than what Seattle faces when it visits one of the Florida clubs, or vice versa. Teams counteract the time difference by simply staying on U.S. time when they arrive in London. Working out the scheduling at Tottenham ā€” which would be shared with the English Premier League soccer club of the same name ā€” would be relatively simple. A bigger issue, at least for any short-term move, comes in the form of the collective bargaining agreement, which expires in 2021. ā€œIā€™ve always felt like a team couldnā€™t move to London until a CBA gets done, because there isnā€™t any provision to ask players or a team of players to play in a different country, on a different continent,ā€ Peter King told Pro Football Talk. Certainly, before London happens for any team, there is a lot to be worked out. The Chargersā€™ issues are not going to be waved away by a first-class ticket across the Atlantic. In the immediate term, they have a football game to try to win. And then another next week. And so on. All this weekā€™s ruckus obscures the fact that this is matchup with major appeal. [On]( [Lock It In,]( [Clay Travis described it]( a ā€œshow-meā€ game for both teams, and it is. The Chargers need to show that the real version of themselves is the one that beat Green Bay, not the one that found a way to lose to the woeful Denver Broncos. The Raiders, with a tasty schedule coming up, have the chance to start something special ā€” so long as they conquer their allergy to consistency. On Thursday, each will have a chance to alter the narrative a little. The winner can get people talking about how theyā€™re going places as a team ā€¦ and not just going to different places. [STORY IMAGE 3] Hereā€™s what others have said ... Arash Markazi, Los Angeles Times: ā€œThe Chargers do have fans. Iā€™ve seen them tailgating before games on Thunder Alley, packing the Santa Monica Pier on draft night and representing a healthy percentage of the crowd at the Coliseum when the Chargers played the Rams last season. The problem is, theyā€™re spread out and donā€™t have an identifiable supportersā€™ section like the Black Hole in Oakland or the Dawg Pound in Cleveland.The first thing the newly named NFL team in L.A. should do is help form an independent supportersā€™ union similar to LAFCā€™s 3252 and dedicate a section at the new stadium to them.ā€ Vincent Bonsignore, The Athletic: ā€œā€˜I think weā€™ve proven the fanbase is there,ā€™ said Alistair Kirkwood, the managing director of NFL UK. ā€™The fact (is) we can sell out games for pretty much any type of matchup, and that the fanbase will come out and support it, so I think that test has been met. I think from an operational and logistics perspective, we have a lot of experience in transportation and managing timezones. Thereā€™s hotels and practice facilities. I think thereā€™s an awful lot of opportunities there.ā€™ā€ Conor Orr, Sports Illustrated: ā€œThe problem with the London story is that it ignores the truth: That the situation is perfect the way it is. London gets to have its fun and send the roadshow home when theyā€™ve reached their fill. It also works the other way around for the league, which gets to ride through the streets a few times a year like a beauty pageant winner, free of any real world problems awaiting them back home. The situation in Los Angeles should serve as a lesson to anyone who believes that itā€™s ultimately easier to leave their home city behind and not an invitation to simply conjure the next great leverage play.ā€ [IN OTHER WORDS] - Cole Anthony, who scored 34 points in his debut for North Carolina, is the freshman you need to know, [writes David M. Hale at ESPN](. - The next Manning: [Jeff Duncan at]( [The Athletic]( [asserts]( that high school QB Arch Manning has the game to match his name. - The bill has come due at Bayern Munich, [writes Rory Smith at]( New York Times](. For Bayern, mystique and financial might no longer overpower rivals the way they once did. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( Most of us become sports fanatics at an early age, but itā€™s not often that the elite-level sports-playing ability is there. This little man doesnā€™t have that problem. At all. In one of the best uses of parental super-slow-mo, this youngster strode to his tee like a boss and then uncorked an absolute picture-perfect home run swing, complete with high leg kick like Juan Soto (albeit right-handed). And that follow-through! Pausing to admire the home run means this kid is nearly ready for the big leagues already. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Los Angeles Chargers at Oakland Raiders (FOX, 8 p.m. ET) Thursday Night Football returns with an AFC West showdown between North and South California. Both teams are seeking their fifth win, with the Chargers currently holding a 4-5 record and the Raiders in second place in the division at 4-4. USWNT vs. Sweden (FS1, 7:30 p.m. ET) The United States Womenā€™s National Team returns to your television screens on Thursday night, playing the latest in their series of international friendlies, this time at the Columbus Crew Stadium in Ohio. Portland Trail Blazers at Los Angeles Clippers (TNT, 10:30 p.m. ET) Round out your sports evening with a national showcase for Kawhi Leonardā€™s crew (although Leonard has been sitting out certain games due to ā€œload managementā€ and a nagging knee injury of late). The Clippers are currently 5-3 and attempting to match their in-building rival Lakersā€™ six wins. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( Chargers to win, Philip Rivers 325+ passing yards, Keenan Allen 80+ receiving yard & Chargers 3+ TDs: +450 Yes, thereā€™s certainly a lot going on in this Thursday Night Football prop as the Chargers face off with the Raiders. But really, the core of this wager is that Los Angeles will have a field day against Oaklandā€™s 32nd-ranked pass defense. Rivers is averaging just shy of 290 yards per game, while Allenā€™s hauled in 73 receiving yards per game. So if the Raiders hold true to form, the Chargers could be in for quite the night through the air. [WHAT THEY SAID] ā€œYouā€™ll never get ahead of anyone as long as you try to get even with him.ā€ ā€” Lou Holtz [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download the FOX Sports app for live scores and streaming [App Store]( [Google Play]( Available on: [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] Forwarded this message? [Sign up](. Trademark & Copyright Notice: ā„¢ and Ā© 2019 FOX Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. Fļ»æOļ»æXļ»æ.ļ»æcļ»æoļ»æm Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media Pļ»æ.ļ»æOļ»æ. Bļ»æoļ»æx 9ļ»æ0ļ»æ0 Bļ»æeļ»ævļ»æeļ»ærļ»ælļ»æy Hļ»æiļ»ælļ»ælļ»æs, Cļ»æA 9ļ»æ0ļ»æ2ļ»æ1ļ»æ3-0ļ»æ9ļ»æ0ļ»æ0

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