WWE owner Vince McMahon is considering bringing back his ill-fated football league, the XFL, amid sagging NFL viewership and a racially charged kneeling epidemic of players who won’t stand for the National Anthem which began during the summer 2016 pre-season. In a recent “30 for 30” documentary about the XFL, McMahon and his partner in the 2001 endeavor – former NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol, pondered the possibility of relaunching the league once promoted as having fewer rules and rougher play than other leagues.
Vince McMahon
“I don’t know what it would be,” McMahon told Ebersol, adding “I don’t know if it’s gonna be another XFL or what it may be or how different I would make it. It seems like in some way it would tie in either with the NFL itself or the owners.”
Then, on Friday, journalist and pro wrestling fan Brad Shepard tweeted “EXCLUSIVE: Vince McMahon is looking to bring back the XFL and may announce it on January 25th, 2018.” Then on Saturday, Shepard said that McMahon pointed to the “30 for 30” interview
EXCLUSIVE: Vince McMahon is looking to bring back the XFL and may announce it on January 25th, 2018.
— Brad Shepard ???????? (@TheBradShepard) December 16, 2017
EXCLUSIVE: Vince McMahon told people in WWE that he developed the desire to bring back the XFL when he was doing the ESPN 30 for 30 documentary on it.
WWE employees have been told internally to “get ready” because it is coming.
— Brad Shepard ???????? (@TheBradShepard) December 16, 2017
Without much else to go on, Deadspin’s David Bixenspan approached the WWE – which neither confirmed nor denied the rumor, but did state that McMahon is “personally funding a separate entity from WWE, Alpha Entertainment, to explore investment opportunities across the sports and entertainment landscapes, including professional football,” followed by another tweet stating that WWE has filed for two new XFL trademarks this year.
A WWE spokesperson issued the attached statement to me & @Deadspin in response to my inquiry about tonight’s rumors of a soon to be announced XFL revival. They declined further comment. Whatever Vince McMahon’s “Alpha Entertainment” is, it’s self-funded & separate from WWE. http://pic.twitter.com/oT0Oxyi2fV
— David Bixenspan (@davidbix) December 16, 2017
In what I’m sure is a complete coincidence, WWE filed for two new XFL trademarks this year, both long after the 30 for 30 premiered.
— David Bixenspan (@davidbix) December 16, 2017
And while the NFL has recently instituted a concussion protocol to address the league’s growing brain injury epidemic, perhaps a rougher, more violent version of the NFL is exactly what America needs right now.
As Mike Florio of PFT writes,
Arguably, the time may be right for the XFL or something like it. A November 2016 Sports Illustrated article regarding the current state of football in America created the distinct impression that fans want old-school football, with all the big hits and none of the obsessions over safety.
“Those attitudes from fans coupled with the messages that invariably will be sent by the incoming Commander-in-Chief,” we wrote on November 16, 2016, “suggest that the time may be right for someone to roll the dice with $250 million or so in the hopes of launching a football league that would essentially operate like a modern-day XFL — loud, proud, violent, brutal, bloody, and everything that the NFL was before political, legal, and social sensitivities forced the league to change.”
Is Vince McMahon going to make football great again?
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