Elite Football League of India explained

EFLI
Last Season:2012 EFLI season
Pixels:200px
Sport:American football
Founded:[1]
Ceo:Richard Whelan
Inaugural:2012
Teams:23
Country: (20 teams)
(1 team)
(2 teams)
Champion:Pune Marathas (1st title)
Most Champs:Pune Marathas (1)
Tv:TEN Sports
TEN Action

The Elite Football League of India (EFLI) was a professional American football league based in India. It was founded with eight franchises in 2011, and now has 23 franchises throughout South Asia, among whom 20 located in India, two in Sri Lanka and one in Pakistan. The league has had only one season till now.[2]

The winners of the first championship were Pune Marathas, who claimed the title after defeating Delhi Defenders 6–0 in the Elite Bowl I on 10 November 2012.[3]

Establishment

In August 2011, the EFLI announced the launch of the league.[4] The aim of the league is to introduce American football to the Indian market and its large consumer base.[5] The organisation's management team consists of United States and Indian business and entertainment executives, and several U.S. sports figures.[6] U.S. brand marketing consultant Sunday Zeller is noted as the founder.[7]

Prominent investors include Brandon Chillar an Indian American linebacker from the Super Bowl-winning Green Bay Packers who played eight games that 2010 season until an injury put him on the injured reserve list,[8] Super Bowl-winning head coach Mike Ditka, former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Michael Irvin, and former NFL quarterbacks Ron Jaworski and Kurt Warner.[9] [10] Investors outside of the sports community include U.S. actor and entertainment producer Mark Wahlberg.[11]

The first regular season games began 22 September 2012.[12] EFLI games are broadcast on television in India, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan, and in the Maldives, Bangladesh, Nepal, Hong Kong, Indonesia and Japan on Ten Sports. This will represent a potential audience of over 500 million viewers.[13] [14]

League structure

The EFLI management's intent is to draw current rugby players from India over to the sport, in part by paying higher salaries than the rugby leagues.[15] In the announcement of the league on 5 August 2011, CEO Richard Whelan noted that orientation programmes had attracted over 4,000 interested players in the previous month alone.[16] Similar orientation events are planned for Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal to attract a wide talent pool.[17]

Ownership of the teams will follow a franchise system, similar to the structure of the NFL, and ownership will be determined in an auction format. Unlike ownership rules in other Indian sports leagues, bidding will be open to both Indian and non-Indian investors alike. Although specifics about league finances have not been announced, officials note that 15% of revenues will be shared with the Ministry of Sports.[13]

While the teams represent cities across India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan, all games for the inaugural season were hosted in Sugathadasa Stadium in Colombo, Sri Lanka. The Sports Authority of India provided also the Balewadi Stadium, which was used for pre-season activities.[13] The games were held in a round-robin format so that all teams played each other.[17]

The expansion plans include total of 24 teams, as a part of a project, which aims to expand to 52 teams by 2022.[18]

Teams-Across Asia

Current teams

ConferenceTeamCity/StateStadiumFirst season
style=background:Black colspan="5"
North 1
Conference 1
Amritsar Guardians Amritsar, PunjabTBATBA (Season 2)
Patiala Silverbacks Patiala, PunjabTBATBA (Season 2)
Punjab Stallions TBA, PunjabTBATBA (Season 2)
Chandigarh Tigers ChandigarhTBATBA (Season 2)
North 2
Conference 2
Delhi Defenders Delhi, Capital TerritoryDefenders Ground2012 (Season 1)
Lucknow Swarm Lucknow, Uttar PradeshTBATBA (Season 2)
Kolkata Vipers Kolkata, West BengalSalt Lake Stadium2012 (Season 1)
Haryana Warriors TBA, HaryanaTBATBA (Season 2)
style=background:Black colspan="8"
Center 1
Conference 3
Surat Diamonds Surat, GujaratTBATBA (Season 2)
Indore Flash Indore, Madhya PradeshTBATBA (Season 2)
Jaipur Legends Jaipur, RajasthanTBATBA (Season 2)
Gujarat Veers Ahmedabad, GujaratTBATBA (Season 2)
Center 2
Conference 4
Pune Blue Panthers Pune, MaharashtraTBATBA (Season 2)
Mumbai Gladiators Mumbai, MaharashtraCooperage Stadium2012 (Season 1)
Pune Marathas Pune, MaharashtraBalewadi Stadium2012 (Season 1)
Navi Mumbai Sabers Navi Mumbai, MaharashtraTBATBA (Season 2)
style=background:Black colspan="8"
South 1
Conference 5
Bangalore Dragons Bangalore, KarnatakaTBATBA (Season 2)
Bangalore Warhawks Bangalore, KarnatakaWarhawks Ground2012 (Season 1)
Goa Waves TBA, GoaTBATBA (Season 2)
South 2
Conference 6
Chennai Cobras Chennai, Tamil NaduTBATBA (Season 2)
Kandy Kings1 Kandy, Central ProvinceTBATBA (Season 2)
Colombo Lions Colombo, Western ProvinceSugathadasa Stadium2012 (Season 1)
Pakistan Wolfpak Peshawar, Khyber PakhtunkhwaWolfpak Ground2012 (Season 1)
  • denotes a relocation of a franchise. See respective team articles for more information.
    1 Kandy Kings are not to be confused with the now-defunct Kandy Skykings, which were known after their relocation as Hyderabad Skykings.

Former/defunct teams

Championships

SeasonElite BowlFinal VenueMVP
  1. of Teams
WinnersScoreRunners-up
2012
Details
Pune Marathas06–00Delhi DefendersRoshan Lobo (RB, Warhawks)8
2015Cancelled
in favour of inaugural EFLI University Championship

Elite Bowl records

In the table below, teams are ordered first by number of wins, then by number of appearances, and finally by year of first appearance. In the "Season(s)" column, bold years indicate winning seasons.

TeamAppearancesWinsLossesSeason(s)
1"Pune Marathas110"2012
2"Delhi Defenders101"2012

Documentary

In 2012, the filmmaking duo Evan Rosenfeld and Jenna Moshell began following the EFLI and chronicling its inaugural season and the introduction of American football to South Asia in the documentary Birth of a Sport.[19]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: American football gets set for India. NDTV Sport. 15 May 2014.
  2. Web site: Uncertainty prevails despite hype surrounding EFLI. 29 June 2014.
  3. Web site: Roy Chowdhury. Souvik. EFLI Stat Sheet: Pune Marathas. Yahoo Sports. 15 May 2014.
  4. Web site: Acayan . Ezra . Elite Football League of India launched - Mumbai . Demotix.com . 2011-08-05 . 2013-10-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121018060559/http://www.demotix.com/news/777860/elite-football-league-india-launched-mumbai . 18 October 2012 . dead .
  5. Web site: American football is coming to India | ProFootballTalk . Profootballtalk.nbcsports.com . 2011-08-03 . 2011-12-02.
  6. News: Gridiron league launched in India . The Times of India . 2011-08-05 . 2011-12-02.
  7. Web site: EFLI - Letter from the founder . 2011-08-06 . dead . https://archive.today/20120728124247/http://www.efli.com/letter-from-the-founder.php . 28 July 2012 . dmy-all .
  8. News: ESPN .
  9. News: Ron Jaworski is investor in new India football league - Philadelphia Business Journal . The Business Journals . 2011-08-03. 2011-12-02 . John . George.
  10. Web site: American Football in India? . Inquisitr.com . 2011-08-03 . 2011-12-02.
  11. News: Kurt Warner, Mark Wahlberg investing in new Indian football league . The Business Journals . 2012-01-25. 2012-01-29 . Kaplan . Daniel.
  12. Web site: Scores and Schedules. EFLI website. EFLI. 13 November 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121010190345/http://www.efli.com/scores-and-stats/efli/full-standings. 10 October 2012. dead.
  13. Web site: Ivie . Eric R. . NFL stars taking American football overseas: A fan's perspective - NFL - Yahoo! Sports . Yahoo! . 2011-12-02 . 12 May 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140512223647/http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ycn-8919377 . dead .
  14. 'They Need TV Product': Why American Football Is Coming To India . Time . 2011-08-04 . 2011-12-02.
  15. Web site: Money scores, American football lures Indian rugby players . The Indian Express . 2011-07-18 . 2011-12-02.
  16. News: Now, EFL wants to take India by storm - Times Of India . The Times of India . 2011-08-06 . 2011-12-02.
  17. Web site: IANS . American football comes to India . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011170916/http://www.deccanchronicle.com/channels/sport/others/american-football-comes-india-521 . dead . 2012-10-11 . Deccan Chronicle . 2011-08-05 . 2011-12-02.
  18. Web site: Coming soon: American football in cricket-crazy India . Firstpost . 2012-04-01 . 2013-10-06.
  19. Web site: Birth of a Sport: American Football in India and Pakistan by Evan Rosenfeld — Kickstarter . Kck.st . 2013-10-06.