must have been living in a cave because i never heard of that league this year.
First year, think it's a great idea
Meet Brooklyn’s new minor league football team
By Zach BrazillerOctober 15, 2014 | 2:15am
Meet Brooklyn’s new minor league football team
They are the NFL’s leftovers, players who couldn’t catch on but aren’t prepared to give up on their dreams. They’re not ready to enter the professional work force or go into coaching. And now, rather than having to sign a two-year deal in Canada with the CFL, they have an outlet.
Meet the Brooklyn Bolts — New York City’s new professional football team.
The Bolts, who open their season Wednesday night against the Boston Brawlers at MCU Park in Coney Island — the home of the Mets’ Single-A affiliate Brooklyn Cyclones — are one of four teams in the fledgling six-week Fall Experimental Football League (FXFL).
The FXFL isn’t trying to compete with the NFL. It will play games Wednesday and Friday nights. The league’s goal is to become a minor league feeder system for the NFL. A majority of the league’s players are NFL washouts or former players, guys who got a taste of a practice squad or were invited to workouts and aren’t ready to call it a career.
“It’s about time,” Bolts coach and former Jets offensive lineman John Bock said. “There’s only two options for a player if they’ve been released: Sign a two-year deal with the CFL or you got to sit the season out. At the same time, the waiver wire is consistently active during the season. If you grab somebody now, they haven’t played football since August.
“Now you have a league showcasing them and giving these young athletes films scouts can see. They have a player who’s been coached, who’s in football shape, who’s ready to play right now. The league and the NFL belong together.”
Each player receives equal pay, $1,000 a week, and the opportunity to put together film to attract an NFL team. Games will be broadcast on a handful of local networks, such as SNY locally, and streamed online on ESPN3. Just last week, Bolts offensive guard Jordan McCray was signed away by the Packers.
Kicker Nick Marsh, who went unsigned after graduating from Rutgers, is putting off his career as an investment banker for the moment, hoping he can impress someone enough in Brooklyn to get his shot.
“Teams don’t have kickers on practice squads,” he said. “This is the next best thing. This is much better, in my opinion, than sitting at an office desk crunching numbers.”
The league is funded by a group of private investors. Its commissioner, Brian Woods, studied the NBA’s D-League and baseball’s minor league system before the launch.
“We’re a minor league model but a major league project,” Woods said. “If you go to minor league baseball games, several of those players have never put on a big league uniform. If you come to our game Wednesday night, a majority of our players have played in the NFL or put on an NFL uniform.”
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Ex-Jet Marvin Jones, a Bolts coach, enjoys a perk of the job: a Nathan’s hot dog.
Photo: Anthony Causi
The Bolts’ most recognizable name is one of its coaches — former Jets linebacker Marvin Jones. The team’s linebackers coach, Jones was brought in by Bock, his former Jets teammates. Jones was dabbling in a few ground-level entrepreneurial pursuits at the time, but the chance to get into football and be part of a league giving players another shot at their dreams drew him back to the sport.
Lineman Mike Golic Jr., the son of NFL All-Pro defensive lineman Mike Golic, has been in camp with the Steelers and Saints. He said from what he has seen with the Bolts, it is comparable to the back end of an NFL roster. Jones agreed, saying it’s a minor step down from a typical practice squad.
“It’s better than the Arena League. We have better players than the CFL,” Bock said. “It’s going to be equivalent to your first or second preseason game in the NFL.”
Bock is a living example of what the FXFL can be. As an undrafted rookie, he was signed and quickly released by the Bears, went to play in NFL Europe, wound up the Jets starting center the following year and went on to enjoy a productive six-year career. He has shared that story frequently with his new players.
“He’s been where we are and gone where we want to go,” Golic Jr. said. “Having that example is invaluable.”
The Cyclones, who are sharing the Bolts’ revenue with the league and running its day-to-day operations, decided to get involved as a way to expand their brand. The fall is usually a dead period in Coney Island as visitors dry up. But Cyclones vice president Steve Cohen envisions families coming out, for the price of $20-$35 a ticket.
With a short turnaround, the plan was to sell 6,300 tickets for the three home games, and he expects to hit that number by Wednesday. That would equate to 2,100 fans per game, filling up less than a third of the stadium, which has a capacity of 7,500.
“It just seems like something that has long-term legs,” Cohen said.