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SportsAugust 13, 2015

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. -- Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon remains confident in St. Louis as an NFL city, even if Rams owner Stan Kroenke succeeds in moving his franchise back to Los Angeles. After visiting Chiefs practice Wednesday, Nixon was asked about the future of the Rams in Missouri. NFL owners had met in suburban Chicago a day earlier and discussed the relocation of at least one team to the West Coast, and the Rams were among the teams presenting proposals...

Associated Press

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. -- Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon remains confident in St. Louis as an NFL city, even if Rams owner Stan Kroenke succeeds in moving his franchise back to Los Angeles.

After visiting Chiefs practice Wednesday, Nixon was asked about the future of the Rams in Missouri. NFL owners had met in suburban Chicago a day earlier and discussed the relocation of at least one team to the West Coast, and the Rams were among the teams presenting proposals.

The San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders are also considering the move.

"The competition here is to make sure you keep your facilities and fan base so it is NFL ready, so that has been our mantra," Nixon said. "Certainly we'd like the Rams to stay there, but if they don't for whatever reason, the bottom line is the NFL has really liked St. Louis as a market, the fans there are really good fans, they won a Super Bowl there, obviously.

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"So what we're trying to do," Nixon said, "is make sure we're competing with all the other NFL cities to make sure we have the facilities and fan amenities."

St. Louis has c a stadium proposal of its own, a $998 million, open-air facility that would be built along the riverfront. Bond extensions, seat licenses, state tax credits and other incentives would help pay for it, while about half the money would come from the team owner and an NFL loan program.

Proponents recently got a boost when a St. Louis circuit judge ruled that approval from city voters is not necessary to use city tax money to help fund the project.

The stadium, which could be ready for the 2019 season, would be the hallmark of a 180-acre riverfront redevelopment project. There are 53 buildings on the property, all but three of which are vacant, and many in varying states of disrepair. They would be replaced by shops, hotels, residential towers and green space just north of the downtown area.

"We've made a solid presentation," Nixon said. "We've got all the litigation out of the way, we're moving forward, it's a great redevelopment site, financing is coming into place, so I think we feel very good about St. Louis remaining an NFL city."

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