Brady and his Patriots getting well-aquainted with Wembley

The annual invasion of linebackers and cheerleaders is as popular as ever. And, Nick Szczepanik writes, there will be even more next year

Monday 29 October 2012 11:00 GMT
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That was a fun day for us offensively. It is a great venue, a really beautiful stadium

If it's late October in London, it must be the NFL at Wembley, and next year it will be September as well. The men at the top of American football believe that the appetite exists in Britain for more than a single annual fix of their product, and another sell-out yesterday evening to see the New England Patriots crush the St Louis Rams 45-7 in the sixth regular-season game to be staged here suggests that they are probably right. A crowd of 84,004, the second-highest for an International Series fixture in the UK and the second highest NFL crowd this season, paid ticket prices ranging from £50 to £149 even though they probably suspected that the Rams were always likely to be more like lambs. They were duly slaughtered by the Patriots, who probably cannot wait to be invited back to Wembley. They beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers here 35-7 three years ago, when quarterback Tom Brady threw three touchdown passes, and this time he went one better with four.

Until last night neither Brady nor the Patriots had been their usually dominant selves this season, but Wembley was always likely to be a stage on which they put that right. "That was a fun day for us offensively," Brady said. "It's a great venue, a beautiful stadium."

There were empty seats by the end, but that was not so much because the result was a foregone conclusion but because Brady was sitting out the rest of the game after a job well done. So far enough British fans have been quite happy to turn up to see any game, whatever the likely outcome and whether it features a team they support or not.

That said, the NFL have been canny enough to persuade at least one big name to travel to London. The next move will see a less well-known team, the Jacksonville Jaguars, play a game here in each of the next four years, which is expected to tell the NFL whether casual fans will attach themselves to a team that appears regularly, and therefore more about whether London could eventually support an NFL franchise. Jacksonville, though, were the second choice for the Wembley residency. That was originally supposed to be the Rams, who looked a good fit in view of the fact that Stan Kroenke, their owner, is also Arsenal's majority shareholder. Unfortunately, they had not told their stadium owners, who pointed out that their lease required them to stage all their regular-season games there, and it took careful negotiation even to stage this game abroad.

The NFL have cleverly balanced the need to give its games in London a sense of occasion with the desire to remind spectators that they are at a regular-season game, with all its significance for the race to the Super Bowl.

The Rams took an early lead yesterday with a spectacular touchdown pass from quarterback Sam Bradford, left, but it was all downhill for them after that as Brady began to dismantle their defence. The Wembley experience has been so successful for the Patriots that they might even want a word with the Jaguars to see if they can take the regular gig instead.

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