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New Stadium Details And Discussions

Bobbins

SC's 14th Sexiest Male 2008
May 5, 2005
21,626
45,274
It would be fantastic having a awesome light show spectacular like that before ko and then come out and play absolute fkin dog shit like recent matches.
Be an even bigger laughing stock.

Could have laser show replays of Jan chasing Gnabry back like a 50 year old binman with asthma smoking a fag.
 

kmk

Well-Known Member
Oct 5, 2014
4,223
28,370
Derek Carr of the Raiders says that the new stadium is unbelievable and one of the best he has ever played in.

 

Bobbins

SC's 14th Sexiest Male 2008
May 5, 2005
21,626
45,274
Watching the game on BBC1 and the stadium does look amazing, seems everyone involved absolutely loves it, fans, players and officials/corporate. Looking to potentially expand to more than 4 games a season in London.

I'd go - I wanted to go to this game but couldn't due to work commitments, but I'd happily go to an NFL game in the future.

@Allygold put up a video on his Twitter account earlier from the stadium and given how busy it was and how early fans turn up, it looks like it will be a real money-spinner for the club and just as importantly, get the stadium even more in the showcase window for future events. Bet it would be immense for a big fight or concert given the acoustics.
 

Westmorlandspur

Well-Known Member
Feb 1, 2013
2,915
4,779
No doubt that if there is an NFL franchise in London. We will get it. I think that would be 8 games. Someone will know for definite.
 

Tottenhamboy85

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2018
2,512
7,932
Levy doing it out of the goodness of his heart.
Lol I meant because they already paid £10m towards the cost of the stadium.

Found this though

“The North London club will, though, make money on matchdays. Not only will they be paid a fee by the NFL when they host a fixture, but they’ll also split profits from ticket, food, drink and even merchandise sales with the US league. Looking at Wembley, the UK stadium to have hosted the most NFL matches so far, they made a profit between £500,000 to £1,000,000 per match. Assuming, say, that Spurs pocket £750,000 per visit from across the pond, that’s £15m over the 20 games of the 10-year deal. In the grand scheme of a £1bn stadium, that’s still not a massive amount, especially when Tottenham will have spent so much on the venue’s NFL-only facilities. A report published by accountancy firm KPMG, for instance, did not expect income streams to rise at a similar ratio to capital costs.”
 

For the love of Spurs

Well-Known Member
Mar 28, 2015
3,453
11,284
Lol I meant because they already paid £10m towards the cost of the stadium.

Found this though

“The North London club will, though, make money on matchdays. Not only will they be paid a fee by the NFL when they host a fixture, but they’ll also split profits from ticket, food, drink and even merchandise sales with the US league. Looking at Wembley, the UK stadium to have hosted the most NFL matches so far, they made a profit between £500,000 to £1,000,000 per match. Assuming, say, that Spurs pocket £750,000 per visit from across the pond, that’s £15m over the 20 games of the 10-year deal. In the grand scheme of a £1bn stadium, that’s still not a massive amount, especially when Tottenham will have spent so much on the venue’s NFL-only facilities. A report published by accountancy firm KPMG, for instance, did not expect income streams to rise at a similar ratio to capital costs.”


It’s the stadium sponsorship that is the prize. You might end up with Nike or some else adding a few extra hundred million because of the NFL on top of the football, particularly if the 2 games per season become 5 or more.
 

Lilbaz

Just call me Baz
Apr 1, 2005
41,363
74,893
It’s the stadium sponsorship that is the prize. You might end up with Nike or some else adding a few extra hundred million because of the NFL on top of the football, particularly if the 2 games per season become 5 or more.

The rams new stadium got $17m a year naming rights deal. Levy will probably want more than that although not sure he'll get it.
 

Dougal

Staff
Jun 4, 2004
60,381
130,344
It’s the stadium sponsorship that is the prize. You might end up with Nike or some else adding a few extra hundred million because of the NFL on top of the football, particularly if the 2 games per season become 5 or more.
Also raising the profile stateside. New fans, new money.
 

King of Otters

Well-Known Member
Jun 11, 2012
10,751
36,094
Watching the game on BBC1 and the stadium does look amazing, seems everyone involved absolutely loves it, fans, players and officials/corporate. Looking to potentially expand to more than 4 games a season in London.

I'd go - I wanted to go to this game but couldn't due to work commitments, but I'd happily go to an NFL game in the future.

@Allygold put up a video on his Twitter account earlier from the stadium and given how busy it was and how early fans turn up, it looks like it will be a real money-spinner for the club and just as importantly, get the stadium even more in the showcase window for future events. Bet it would be immense for a big fight or concert given the acoustics.

I wanted to go this year but just couldn’t get tickets. The demand is obviously huge.
 

cliff jones

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
4,146
6,771
Lol I meant because they already paid £10m towards the cost of the stadium.

Found this though

“The North London club will, though, make money on matchdays. Not only will they be paid a fee by the NFL when they host a fixture, but they’ll also split profits from ticket, food, drink and even merchandise sales with the US league. Looking at Wembley, the UK stadium to have hosted the most NFL matches so far, they made a profit between £500,000 to £1,000,000 per match. Assuming, say, that Spurs pocket £750,000 per visit from across the pond, that’s £15m over the 20 games of the 10-year deal. In the grand scheme of a £1bn stadium, that’s still not a massive amount, especially when Tottenham will have spent so much on the venue’s NFL-only facilities. A report published by accountancy firm KPMG, for instance, did not expect income streams to rise at a similar ratio to capital costs.”

excellent. Enough to pay off GLC's loan fee by the end of the next decade.
 

yankspurs

Enic Out
Aug 22, 2013
41,994
71,424
Lol I meant because they already paid £10m towards the cost of the stadium.

Found this though

“The North London club will, though, make money on matchdays. Not only will they be paid a fee by the NFL when they host a fixture, but they’ll also split profits from ticket, food, drink and even merchandise sales with the US league. Looking at Wembley, the UK stadium to have hosted the most NFL matches so far, they made a profit between £500,000 to £1,000,000 per match. Assuming, say, that Spurs pocket £750,000 per visit from across the pond, that’s £15m over the 20 games of the 10-year deal. In the grand scheme of a £1bn stadium, that’s still not a massive amount, especially when Tottenham will have spent so much on the venue’s NFL-only facilities. A report published by accountancy firm KPMG, for instance, did not expect income streams to rise at a similar ratio to capital costs.”
Its a money winner with sponsorship and exposure of Spurs to the American fan base where, while the EPL is growing, it’s still untapped in many areas.
 
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