|
Post by xtreme05 on Aug 19, 2013 21:29:12 GMT -5
It seems like every year a league comes and goes. What would it take to have a successful league that can last 5-10 years? I know a lot of has to do with teams and owners, but I'm sure the league can try and help out some of the weaker teams. What are your thoughts?
|
|
|
Post by BlitzinBandit on Aug 20, 2013 12:05:37 GMT -5
Look at CPIFL model and their is your answer..Quality ownership, geographical landscape, shorter travel and smaller budget(smaller salaries, local recruiting, less housing of players). Not saying everything is perfect in the CPIFL but they have had a great first season and would only imagine that will continue years to come.
|
|
dbenn
Practice Squad
Posts: 32
|
Post by dbenn on Aug 21, 2013 11:30:21 GMT -5
I would guess that it takes local ownership, local players, local sponsors. (do you see a pattern?)
I think having the league controlled by the owners of the teams would be an excellent start.
|
|
|
Post by BlitzinBandit on Aug 21, 2013 12:16:23 GMT -5
I would guess that it takes local ownership, local players, local sponsors. (do you see a pattern?) I think having the league controlled by the owners of the teams would be an excellent start. That's why the cpif is the best
|
|
|
Post by Banana Cat on Aug 24, 2013 13:53:03 GMT -5
CPIFL had a good first year, but lets wait 4 more years before declaring their model the best. If they can resist the temptation to expand too far out of their regional footprint, then they should keep trucking along at a great speed, but if they get greedy and go outside their region (like so many other leagues have done), then they'll join the trash heap of leagues who self destructed after a good start.
|
|
|
Post by gatek99 on Feb 8, 2014 13:57:41 GMT -5
I figured I would start this up again. What are some of the leagues' team's budget figures? Player Salary, Travel, Arena rent, etc.
|
|