Jan 08, 2014 03:59 PM EST
NFL Postseason Expansion: Roger Goodell Talks Extra Wild Card Teams With Games On Friday or Monday In 2015?

The NFL playoffs are into the divisional round and as teams get ready to play for the first time after having bye weeks, Roger Goodell spoke in an interview on Tuesday and talked about the possibility of expanding the playoffs with more wild card teams, a move that would help add games without adding an 18-game schedule and would be somewhat similar to what the MLB did by adding postseason teams a couple years ago.

Good3ell spoke about the possibility of adding teams and that would mean a new revenue stream for games and would push the playoffs from just Saturday and Sunday on Wild Card weekend to Friday or Monday of that same week. The teams likely would be expanded to 14 teams from the current twelve and while that would change things up, it also would offer teams the chance to get in who otherwise wouldn't.

"It's something that the competition committee looked at last year and thinks there are some real benefits from a competitive standpoint," Goodell said. "They're going to study some aspects of that. Because when would those games occur? And one team would get a bye in each conference and you'd have six games on the weekend. So would you have three on Saturday, and three on Sunday? Or do you get one on Friday and two on Saturday and two on Sunday and one on Monday? I think those are the kinds of things we want to evaluate."

Here is a look at the news from Reuters.com and more on the playoffs, LA teams and expansion to London in the future. National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell said league owners are considering an expanded playoff format and that he would like to see franchises in Los Angeles and London.

Nearly every game during the final week of the NFL's 2013 regular season had playoff implications and Goodell said the league needs to maintain that competitiveness, and expanding the current 12-team postseason format could be the answer.

"That is under serious consideration," Goodell told an event in New York on Tuesday. "One of the great things about the NFL other than it's unscripted is that every team starts the season with hope."

While Goodell admitted that NFL owners are considering the addition of two wild-card teams to the playoff mix, he did not offer a timeline for when such a change would occur.

He did, however, offer support for basing teams in London, where the NFL has held a regular season game each year beginning with the 2007 season, and Los Angeles, where the league has been without a team since 1995.

Los Angeles has been the largest U.S. market without an NFL team since the Raiders left for Oakland nearly 20 years ago.

The NFL's International Series, which began in 2007 with one game per season at London's Wembley Stadium, was created to help grow the league's fan base. The game's regularly attract crowds of over 80,000 and three games will be held at Wembley in 2014.

"I think it's possible if we continue to have success in London that we would have a franchise there," said Goodell, who did not express a preference for which city - London or Los Angeles - might land an NFL franchise first.

"I don't know which will be first and I'm not sure I care. I'd like to see if we can be successful in both ultimately."

With New Jersey set to host the NFL's first cold-weather Super Bowl on February 2, Goodell said there is no guarantee other cities in cold climates with outdoor stadiums will get the chance to host the league's championship game.

The New York and New Jersey area were awarded hosting rights for the Super Bowl back in 2010 with a bid that trumped others in projected economic benefit for the league and ticket sales.

"This is obviously innovative and it's something new but it's also unique because it's New York," said Goodell.

"Every city can't host a Super Bowl just because of the sheer enormity of this event. And it's not just a football game. We have a week full of events, we probably have well over 150,000 coming in to the New York region for this event."

(Reuters)

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