I love the arrogance of NFL owners thinking they can just move teams willy nilly. The Raiders have been in Oakland a long time. They even moved once then changed their minds and realized they had a good thing in Oakland. I am not a fan of the Oakland fan base. It is one of the worst as far as the kind of people. However it is fairly passionate (especially for a west coast fan base). It is not huge but there are smaller teams to move that as less of a staple in their area.
This would not only be bad for football but bad for the owners. If they do it then it will be LA all over again. They will realize after 10 some years they made a mistake when the stadium never gets full and their merchandise sales go down they have made a mistake and will move it back. However how long can you jerk a fan base around before they say screw you and decide to latch on to a more stable team that won't let this crap happen.
You might not like the following article but you probably should read it:
The Chargers' pending move to L.A. exposes the NFL's truth when it comes to fans | FOX Sports
Once the team sells the PSLs and the luxury boxes, the fan base really doesn't matter. The money they get from ticket and merch sales is pocket change.
Personally I think we might get to the point where some teams move every 20-30 years or so to get the big score that a new city with a new stadium can provide.
Stadiums (stadia?) are pretty poor investments. Their economic life isn't very long. For instance the Georgia Dome opened in 1992 and it's replacement is going to be opened in only 26 years. Giants Stadium lasted from 1976 to 2010 so it was 34 years. So, we're talking about investing billions in an asset whose economic life expectancy is 30 or so years. Other issue is you need really huge events to be able to utilize them, and these huge events need to be big earners since there aren't many of them. For instance MSL games aren't a big enough draw, given how few of them use NFL stadiums. I bet the Krafts lose money big time on their MSL team. I think they bought it on speculation hoping that some day pro soccer takes off, and they're probably regretting doing so.
So, in short, billionaires know it works out best for them if they can stick the city with the bill for the stadium.
Every owner is thinking about themselves with this vote. And what this vote says to their local market is "If you don't pay up for a stadium, someone else will". It's nothing more than leverage for getting more handouts from taxpayers.
I fully respect places like San Diego and Oakland that tell a billionaire making obscene profits to take a hike if they expect a handout.
You are spot on with both points.
One reason the NFL was OK with the Chargers leaving SD is because they want to reinforce the idea that the public needs to pay for the stadiums.
Kraft showed everyone a working model that didn't cost the state a dime, and they even got the logisics money back from parking fees. If Davis can't afford to build it himself, then the f*cking league and its incredibly deep pockets should front the money. I mean why wouldn't they, if those stadiums were so lucrative. It would be a sound business investment that they should love to get in on.
I'm with you, but in reality "NFL Inc (tm)" itself doesn't have money to throw around. In essence they skim off a few percent from the TV revenues etc to keep the NFL itself functioning (including Herr Goodell's salary) and all the rest goes to 'the 32'. They'd need approval from the owners at a league meeting to skim off the money needed to fund a stadium.
In this particular case, you're talking about 'the 32' using their own money to provide a windfall to the son of Al Davis and that just ain't gonna happen. Insiders will tell you that they still have vivid if not livid memories of when Al Davis sued the league. It was one of the very few true crises in the NFL's history, since Al went for the jugular and filed an anti-trust suit against the League. He wasn't all that far away from winning, either, and if he had, that would have been the end of the NFL. Seriously.
I'm kind of surprised they're letting him go to Vegas. I thought they'd make him stew in his own juices in OAK. I imagine once the Nevada legislature coughed up $750M for the new stadium they really didn't have of a choice because it'd look terrible to get that much public money then walk away from it. It also has to help that he's gonna have to pay most of that money back to 'the 32' in the form of the relocation fee.