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Professional Football Today The
present-day NFL game is immensely popular. It is played during the late
summer, through autumn, and into January. Professional teams play 4
exhibition games before the start of the regular season, followed by 16
games in the regular season and then playoff games, when they qualify
for the playoffs. Teams play one game each week, using the time between
games to recover, practice, and prepare for the next game. Each team
receives one week without a game, known as a bye, during the season. The
NFL is a big business for players, owners, advertisers, and other
industries tied to the sport. NFL franchises generate huge revenues for
host cities, in addition to promoting civic pride and national exposure.
Thus, cities often compete for teams, offering prospective teams bigger
and better stadiums, guaranteed fan support, and various economic
incentives.
In the 1980s three NFL teams relocated: the Raiders moved from
Oakland, California, to Los Angeles in 1982; the Colts moved from
Baltimore, Maryland, to Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1984; and the
Cardinals moved from Saint Louis, Missouri, to Phoenix, Arizona, in
1988. Other teams have agreed to stay only with the promise of new
facilities by their host cities. Throughout the years, other consortiums
have sought to capitalize on the economic potential of the sport. For
three years in the 1980s a new professional spring league, the United
States Football League (USFL), competed with the NFL. The NFL lost
players to the USFL, and NFL teams had to pay higher salaries to keep
other players from leaving. However, the USFL soon folded, with much of
its more talented personnel entering the NFL.
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