2014 Super Bowl to be held in The Apple...

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At the NFL meetings Tuesday, team owners will decide whether to take their biggest extravaganza to a place where it has never been.

Think New York in February.

Owners are expected to decide whether to award the first open-air, cold-weather Super Bowl to New York, which is vying for the 2014 game. The Giants and Jets open their new stadium this season. In recent years, the Super Bowl and the week of festivities that precedes it increasingly has become a financing mechanism for new venues.

Commissioner Roger Goodell does not cast a vote on who is awarded the Super Bowl, but has made it clear he supports the New York bid, whose theme is "Make Some History."

LA Times
 

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Official Super Bowl 2114 in NYC

IRVING, Tex. — National Football League owners, lured by playing the sport’s biggest game on the largest stage, combined with the promise that snow would not grind the event to a halt, awarded the 2014 Super Bowl to New York on Tuesday afternoon, making the New Meadowlands Stadium the host of what will be the first cold-weather Super Bowl.

The New York-New Jersey bid beat out proposals from Tampa, Fla., and South Florida — two traditional hosts — in part to reward the Giants and the Jets for building a new billion-dollar stadium together, a tactic the N.F.L. has used when they have placed the game in Detroit, Dallas and Indianapolis.

But the vote also represented an embrace of New York’s abundant entertainment, promotional and financial opportunities. The proposal called for everything from a Super Bowl float in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade to a party at Liberty State Park. Of more interest to a league bent on building revenue and an international audience is that the weeklong extravaganza would play out in the global media and business capital, and in an area where 36 percent of the 20 million people who live in the region were born outside the United States.

Those considerations outweighed concerns by some owners opposed to a cold-weather game that snow could wreak havoc on a week’s worth of parties and planning and that the outcome of the championship game could be affected by foul weather. In bid materials obtained by The New York Times, the organizers promised everything from hand-warmers to fire pits in the parking lots to keep fans comfortable and snowplows to clear the streets.

“Elements can be a common factor in how a season unfolds, so why can’t it be a factor in how the ultimate championship is determined,” Jerry Jones, the Dallas Cowboys’ owner and a proponent of the New York Super Bowl, said before the vote was taken.

The New York bid first gained momentum in December, when owners waived a rule that called for outdoor Super Bowls to be played in cities where the average February temperature is at least 50 degrees. In fact, the bid exploited the possibility of bad weather, encouraging owners to go “old school” in playing a game that could rival some of the most memorable in N.F.L. history because they were played in the elements.

ew York became the clear favorite at the most recent Super Bowl — played in South Florida — when Commissioner Roger Goodell, whose tenure has been marked by a desire to break from the status quo, indicated that he found the idea of a New York game attractive.

Shortly after that, Arizona, considered a strong contender to host future Super Bowls, dropped out of the bidding, leaving New York as the front-runner. The New York bid also enjoyed the support of a large group of influential owners, including Jones, the New England Patriots’ Robert K. Kraft and the Denver Broncos’ Pat Bowlen, as well as others who voted for New York out of loyalty to the long-respected family of the Giants owner John Mara.

The New York bid encountered its greatest resistance from owners who remain concerned that the New York Super Bowl opens the door for other cold-weather cities — Denver and Washington among them — to bid for future games, and who dislike the idea that bad weather could tilt the balance of the game.

Cold-weather Super Bowls are unlikely to become the norm, but the N.F.L. has made no promise that the New York game would be a one-time cold-weather event, and owners of cold-weather teams, including those in Philadelphia and Cleveland, backed the New York bid, perhaps with their eyes on the future.

According to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Web site, the coldest outdoor game in Super Bowl history was Super Bowl VI at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans: the temperature at game time was 39 degrees. Super Bowl IX, also at Tulane Stadium, was 46 degrees. And six other outdoor games had game time temperatures in the 50s.

The New York Super Bowl would be the most expensive to stage — the host committee must raise $40 million for the event — but estimates for the economic impact on the area range widely from $55 million to $550 million, the optimistic number proffered by the bid organizers.

The Giants and the Jets will not make any money off the Super Bowl, but the promise of hosting the game could ratchet up interest in bidding for the multimillion-dollar naming rights for the new stadium, a market that has slowed during the recession and as businesses have become concerned with the appearance of spending money to put their name on a stadium.

But that was not on owners’ minds Tuesday. They are caretakers of the most aggressively hyped event in American sports, and the New York bid promised more of that — prepare for a “season of events” to promote the game for a full year — than any other city could offer. The buildup to the vote alone generated more buzz than any other. Even the fear of freezing rain on Super Bowl Sunday was not enough to dampen the N.F.L.’s enthusiasm for a bid that called a papal Mass mere “practice” for the Super Bowl.

“I’ll bet if it happens,” Kraft said on Monday, “it will be one of the most memorable games in the history of all Super Bowls.”

NY Times
 

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Mickey Loganno

Good point but basically splitting hairs. If NYC was not there most certainly there would be no super bowl in The Meadowlands in 2114. The Meadowlands in Northen New Jersey is just where they will actually play the game but all of the hype and build up will occur in the city not to mention every decent and some not so decent hotel room in the city will be booked at top dollar. There are a minority of big time stadiums located in the actual cities of the teams they represent. Look at Gillette Stadium it is in a sleepy little town called Foxboro. Dallas Cowboy Stadium the home of this year's Super Bowl is actually in Arlington, Texas.

I could go on but I think you might get my point.

wilheim
 
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As noted in All the News that has Covered this. NJ & NY will share the Monies..

The Big Pre-Game Events will be Held at the Javits Center in NY, and some held in Times Square.

But YES, the Super Bowl it self will be Held in NJ.

And Agree 100% with what Wil said.....If NY wasn't apart of it, they wouldn't have had it.
 

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yea whos going to pay all that money for a ticket to sit in below zero weather,nobody....whos going to preform at halftime in the snow,nobody...its a completely stupid idea and they should have made it a dome if they wanted a super bowl......screw that whole idea
 

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I think the coldest games in the meadowlands were like 20 degrees or above, that is not below zero at all, that is nice out when you are tipsy
 
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so we gonna have a super bowl outside in Seattle sometime? they should truly spread it around or just pick one sunny warm spot....so many teams take it up the ass and never get the big one.....fuck the nfl

I can't wait for the season to start!
 

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I can't believe this is going to take place. Just look at the weather the east coast had this winter. What's going to happen if there's a monster snowstorm just when the teams are supposed to be traveling to Giants Stadium and the teams can't get into NJ?

They could wind up having to postpone the game. And if that happens, the shit really hits the fan as hotel and airline reservations will be totally screwed up. Not only for the public, but for the teams. Hotels will have others booked in for the week after the SB.

Why didn't the Giants/Jets build a domed stadium to start with? Then it would make sense to have it there. They are going to be very sorry for this move, and things could really come apart in their face.
 

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I think the coldest games in the meadowlands were like 20 degrees or above, that is not below zero at all, that is nice out when you are tipsy



well if you lived here back east maybe you could say that,but since you don't and i do i think i would know better.i go there,ive been thru the swirling winds of the meadowlands,and its cold in january and feburary.im not sure how you get your information,weather channels,or reports on espn,but if you have not been there during that time of year then you really wouldn't know
 

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the only ones going to benifit off this is the ones whose pockets are getting filled.all the company executives and their bigshots will get booth tickets where its warm and with food and drink but the rest of us blue collar people will be left out in the cold.do you really think an arizona or california,or florida fan base is going to come east coast in the dead of winter for the super bowl and sit outside.....i think not,even though im from back east,they should have made it a retractable dome then it would be sufficent for all to come to enjoy the game
 

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"yea whos going to pay all that money for a ticket to sit in below zero weather,nobody....whos going to preform at halftime in the snow,nobody...its a completely stupid idea and they should have made it a dome if they wanted a super bowl......screw that whole idea"


Jeeze, I dunno. Maybe the same people who pay all that money to watch the Nfc and Afc Championship game at Gillette Stadium. Or Lambeua. Or Soldiers Field. Or Heinz Field. Yea completely stupid idea. You are right they will have NO one show up for this game.
 

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yea whos going to pay all that money for a ticket to sit in below zero weather,nobody....whos going to preform at halftime in the snow,nobody...its a completely stupid idea and they should have made it a dome if they wanted a super bowl......screw that whole idea

I'm thinking America's most vibrant and wealthiest region won't have any problems.

Might be the toughest ticket ever.
 

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I think it's great that it's coming to NYC, the city that never sleeps.

There will be plenty of rooms and restaurants and activities for everybody. And although golfing and beaches will be out of the question, there are plenty of casinos within driving distance.

Hope the Patriots get there :103631605
 

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It's the way football should be played.




yea your right,it is the way football is played.but the nfl always wants the teams to play on an even keel for the big game.im just wondering,is the nfl doing this so it fails and they could hold face and say they at least tried it.just curious,you know that they are all for themselves.


hey for you guys who think im complaining im not,ill be there thats for sure,ive already sat in 32 degrees below zero with the wind chill factor and snowstorm with the buccs/jets,so it won't hlod me back
 

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It's the way football should be played.

Let me finish that quote. It's the way football should be played, in the 1970's.

Sorry but football isn't the 3 yards and a cloud of dust it used to be. In 2010 it is a precision game that relies on passing the football. That is what the NFL itself has all but promoted with their rule changes like you can't touch the WR or the QB. So if the NFL is going to promote and make money by offense and throwing the football than don't put your biggest game in a city that very well may have snow on the ground at the time of the game. Sorry I have no interest in seeing Peyton Manning vs. Drew Brees in a hand off match.
 

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...and one more thing. It is not a given that it will be cold and snowing on Superbowl Sunday in Jersey. There have been plenty of days in February when it feels like fall. Of course we could also have two feet of snow on the ground.
 

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...and one more thing. It is not a given that it will be cold and snowing on Superbowl Sunday in Jersey. There have been plenty of days in February when it feels like fall. Of course we could also have two feet of snow on the ground.


Yes it could get all the way up to 59 degrees. That is the record high for new york on Feb 2nd. Or it could be -3 degrees. That is the record low. Of course this past Feb 2nd it was between 27 and 33 degrees and it snowed .8 inches. Not what I want to see for the biggest game of the year
 

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