The first thing I noticed about this year’s tailgate was how much the NFLUK are appealing to the adult fans. Last year it was all about large inflatable’s, that younger fans, or people like me got involved with, but such things took up a lot of space and demanded a lot of queues. Not only was there far, far more merchandise this year, but it was all sorted into different teams. The AFC had a massive tent on one side of the lot while the NFC had just as a big a tent on the other side. The only problem would be if you wanted merchandise from two conferences then you would have to queue twice, but overall think the system worked well.
There were two large tents in the middle of the space in front of the stage. The left one was an open museum for every NFL team. 16 huge boards were in the room, with each face representing a different NFL team. Each team had some history of each club, and a ballot for a signed prize from each team. At the Bear’s wall, it was a signed Urlacher jersey that was to be won. I signed my name, but sadly haven’t heard anything yet.
Next up it was a tricky attempt to find Peter, who told us he was in the Reebok VIP hospitality tent. Reebok are not ones to shy away from splashing their logo about, but ironically their tent was just plain white, which we must have walked past a dozen times before realizing Peter was inside. The security guard allowed us to walk into the tent without a pass. Peter came over to us, and it was nice being shaded from the elements as the afternoon chill started to pick up. We took a breather on the seats. There was a strong lavish smell from the rather swanky looking buffet. In the corner was a small homage to the NFL (via NFL products), and it looked like a tidy version of my bedroom. Steph jumped the rope so we could sneak in a cheeky picture. We were introduced to high some high flyers in the Reebok world and most people were very friendly even in the knowledge that they knew we were not supposed to be in the VIP tent.
Back inside more people took pictures of my hat; it even caught the eye of a couple of Patriot cheerleaders! The sky sports team came by and we did our interview with the same crew that worked with us last year. The business of the tailgate really started to pick up. And that is when I saw the energetic Colin Mansell, who also had a stint on Sky sports. Colin and myself have been in touch for some time now, and he will be attempting to break the world record, by going to 33 NFL stadiums in 106 days. Which is what I did last season, though I ended up doing 40 football games in 18 weeks. The original record was all 32 clubs in107 days in 2002, but although I did it quicker, Guinness did not honour my record because I flew, and I counted London and Toronto as NFL stadiums. Still I wish Colin all the best and when he finds a season with a good schedule I will be supporting him any way I can!
Mike Carlson, the NFL pundit, recognised me and he was in good spirits about the game ahead, telling me he predicts a Patriots win by 14. Time was creeping up and we wanted to check out the Green man Hotel’s un-official tailgate party. So we walked to the pub, against the grain of the jubilant NFL fans making their way to the stadium. I saw Martin and he was happy that over 5000 people had passed through his tailgate. Things were calming down, and we had apparently missed the Colchester cheerleaders and the ‘Buc’s, honorary captain; radio and T.V presenter, Vernon Kay. There was food available to buy, and Steph picked up an “average” hot dog, which was not much better than my sub-par burger that I picked up just before meeting Sky sports. My burger was bought at a stand called “Premium burgers”, and when I asked for such, the girl behind didn’t know of the word “premium”, says it all really!
It was hard to see who the home team was as there were so many Patriot jerseys, but there wasn’t too much crowd noise in the first possession, engineered by the ‘Bucs, which would imply they have plenty of support here, as they are supposed to be the home team. The first two Tampa Bay drives resulted in two Patriot interceptions. The crowd was mixed about the patriots first TD. I wanted to see scoring but realized then it could be a whitewash.
Although it is good to watch a competent team, lead by the efficient field general of Brady, but it all looked too easy and without drama. This was not the best of the three games that have come to London as the Patriots dominated in all areas and sadly it was probably the worst in terms of fan experience.
The ‘Bucs finally did score and the crowd got more into the game. The full capacity of 85,000 completed at least 13 revolutions of the Mexican wave, which was nothing short of awesome.The second half was much of the same from Brady and co as they destroyed the so-called home team, but people still kept their red and white flags waving. To sum up I have to say the spectacle at the tailgate was far superior to the action inside the stadium.
Hi Adam,
ReplyDeleteAll sounds great. Shame about the game but glad you enjoyed the tailgate.
So what happened about the trip? How come you are still in the UK?
Mail me.
Cheers
Peter