The NFL's six-owner Los Angeles stadium committee recommended the joint proposal offered by the Chargers and Raiders, but what does it mean?
Maybe not a whole lot.
The committee's recommendation Tuesday afternoon still may not be enough to sway owners like Cowboys owner Jerry Jones from supporting the proposal from Rams owner Stan Kroenke.
League owners will have to decide between Kroenke's proposal in the L.A. suburb of Inglewood or the Chargers-Raiders proposal in Carson. Kroenke has said he will be open to having either the Chargers or Raiders as a stadium partner, but would share only football-related revenue with the hypothetical partner. The Chargers seem the most likely option.
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Because Jones, Kroenke and other owners who side with them are in direct opposition of the committee's recommendation, any proposed move for the 2016 season could be blocked.
In order for any team to move from its current city, at least 24 of the league's 32 owners would have to approve relocation. While the cities of San Diego and St. Louis believe they have strong stadium proposals to keep their teams, the NFL called the proposals submitted to the league last week "unsatisfactory and inadequate," and not viable to keep the Raiders, Rams and Chargers in their respective home markets.
One thing was actually decided by the committee. The Rams will not be in Los Angeles alone because that option for Kroenke's Inglewood site was pulled from the ballot.
Whatever the league owners decide, Chargers owner Dean Spanos said he'll abide by the decision even if it goes against his wishes.
With the owners' meetings in Houston concluding on Wednesday, a vote on the matter now seems unlikely and will probably be tabled until March, when the owners meet again