The NFL wants more money. Let’s stop dancing around it.
Yes, the league wants to sell more tickets abroad. Yes, it wants to broaden the fan base, move more jerseys, plant more flags in more countries, and keep turning the sport into a global cash machine with shoulder pads. None of that is complicated.
What is complicated, apparently, is admitting that loyal fans here in the United States are getting the short end of the stick while the league keeps patting itself on the back for being visionary. On Tuesday, NFL owners approved the ability to stage up to 10 international games per season starting in 2027, up from the record nine international games already on the 2026 schedule. They also voted to eliminate the old rule that allowed teams to protect up to two home games from international selection.
And that is where this goes from “fine, whatever, one overseas novelty game a year” to something fans should absolutely be annoyed about.
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Rotating a few games around the globe on a limited scale is one thing. Most fans can live with that. It is part circus, part marketing tour, part TV event, and while it is not ideal, it at least feels contained. But increasing the total number of international games and stripping teams of the ability to protect home dates is something else entirely.
That is the league looking at the people who actually buy tickets, buy concessions, buy parking, buy jerseys, and scream themselves hoarse in the stadium every Sunday and saying, “Thanks for the decades of loyalty. We’re taking one of your Sundays and shopping it to another continent.”
The 2026 season already features a record nine international games across four continents, seven countries, and eight stadiums. The schedule includes games in Melbourne, Rio de Janeiro, London, Paris, Madrid, Munich, and Mexico City. That is not a side experiment anymore. That is a serious chunk of the calendar. And now the NFL has cleared the runway for even more.
The league will tell you this is about growth. And sure, it is. But growth for whom? Not for the season-ticket holder who loses one of the eight or nine home dates that define the year. Not for the local businesses around stadiums that depend on game weekends. Not for the fan who already shells out real money to support a team and then gets told one of the games that was supposed to belong to the home crowd has been reassigned to a global branding exercise. Teams lose. Fans lose. The only side that clearly wins is the league office and its business partners.
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And the removal of protected games matters more than the league would like people to notice. Under the old structure, teams had at least some ability to shield key home dates. That protection is now gone. Once that disappears, every fan base has more reason to worry that its stadium is becoming less of a priority than the NFL’s next international sales pitch. Even if a team only loses one game in a given year, the message is the same: your loyalty is appreciated right up until it conflicts with a bigger revenue opportunity overseas.
The NFL will survive the complaints, of course. It always does. Football is too big, too addictive, and too woven into the American sports bloodstream for fans to walk away in meaningful numbers. The league knows that, which is exactly why it keeps pushing. It knows fans will grumble, then renew tickets, buy merch, and watch anyway. That does not make the complaints wrong. It makes the strategy cynical.
And let’s be real about what gets lost here. Home games are not just inventory. They are community ritual. They are tailgates, traditions, road trips, families, rivalries, and local identity. They are the thing fans circle for months. When the NFL exports more of that product, it is not just moving a date on a spreadsheet. It is taking a piece of the live experience away from the people who built the league into what it is. You can globalize the sport without pretending the American home fan is infinitely expendable. The NFL just does not seem especially interested in trying.
That is the bottom line. The NFL can call this growth. It can call it strategy. It can call it the future. Fans can call it what it looks like: a cash grab that asks the most loyal people in the sport to give up more while the league cashes in harder. Limited international expansion was one thing. Upping the number of games and taking away protected home dates is another. The teams lose. The fans lose. And the NFL keeps proving, yet again, that when there is a choice between tradition and more money, it already knows which one it values most.
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