Skyrocketing negative ratings and intense opposition from within his own party haven’t dissuaded Donald Trump from pursuing the Republican nomination for president, but the chance to run an NFL franchise would have, according to the real estate mogul himself.
Back in 2014, Trump made a very public bid to buy the Buffalo Bills, floating a $1 billion figure that was met with a healthy degree of skepticism and outright opposition at the time. Ultimately, Trump was passed over in favor of another billionaire, Terry Pegula (who bought the team for $1.4 billion), which inspired a series of insulting tweets in which the then-reality star mocked his rival’s leadership of the Buffalo Sabres hockey franchise, claimed that he deserved credit for driving up the team’s price and made a now familiar lament that the game of pro football itself had become “so boring now” and “too soft!”
Monday in Buffalo, on the eve of what is expected to be big electoral victory for Trump in his home state of New York, the Republican front-runner appeared to still be bitter over his missed opportunity. Although he now referred to Pegula and his wife as “two great people,” he took considerable pains to recount the fact that he allegedly bid $1 billion for the Bills franchise and had “sent out a certified letter to the bank” saying as much.
“I was a little bit hurt,” Trump conceded in a rare moment of humility. In February, he told the Associated Press: “If I bought that team, I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing,” as in running for president. This should come as no surprise to anyone who has followed his career as a public figure, Trump has a long preoccupation with what has become America’s most popular sport, and he has routinely invoked it at times both appropriate and random on the campaign trail.
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On Monday night, Trump was introduced by Bills coach Rex Ryan, who alluded to one of the more controversial chapters in Trump’s business career — his unsuccessful foray into sports ownership with the now-defunct New Jersey Generals of the also obsolete United States Football League.
For the uninitiated, the USFL was an ill-fated attempt to create a pro-football league that could compete with the all-powerful NFL on the national stage. Founded in the mid-1980s, the concept was that USFL games would played in the spring while the NFL was on hiatus. Its first season boasted decent ratings, generated significant fan interest and featured high-caliber talent (future NFL Hall of Famers Steve Young and Jim Kelly, for example).
“It was the fun league,” sportscaster Charley Steiner, who called the Generals’ games, told the New York Times in February.
In 1984, prior to the second season, Trump bought the Generals. ”I could have bought an NFL team,” a then 37-year-old Trump bragged to the Times at the time. ”There were three or four available — that still are available, including, of course, the Dallas Cowboys. I could have bought an NFL club for $40 million or $50 million, but it’s established and you would just see it move laterally. Not enough to create there.”
He also denigrated the entire league’s premise, telling reporters: “If God had wanted Spring football, he wouldn’t have invented baseball.” Trump was apparently interested in setting up a direct competition with the NFL in the fall by its fourth season, and he eventually persuaded most USFL owners to back him. This move spooked both NFL owners and television stations which had huge multi-million dollar deals in place with the more established football league.
“I think it was a big mistake,” Dr. Ted Diethrich, one of the USFL’s original owners, told ESPN last year. “When that decision was made, the course for this was charted, and it was going to be a wreck.”
Trump, as he has shown a propensity to do, took legal action and sued the NFL for being a monopoly. A jury did rule that the NFL’s domination of network coverage was unfair but instead of granting the USFL’s $1.2 billion request, they awarded the league just $3. And the USFL came to an abrupt halt shortly thereafter. To this day, Trump is widely blamed for its premature demise.
“I have a warm spot in my heart for that period,” Trump told the Associated Press in February. “I had a great time.”
In that same interview, Trump claimed that he approached buying the Bills two years ago only “tentatively,” because he was “always was a little concerned if the NFL would remember how I knocked the hell out of them.” Apparently a $3 victory tastes just as sweet to the GOP front-runner as a $1.2 billion one.
And although Trump insisted that running for president is more “exciting” and “cheaper” than NFL ownership, that hasn’t stopped him from repeatedly linking himself to the game. Early in his campaign, Trump claimed to have the endorsement of four-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady, who Trump had previously fiercely defended for the quarterback’s alleged role in the “deflate-gate” scandal.
Brady has called Trump a friend (who apparently would regularly call him to offer unsolicited “motivation”), but begged off the notion that he was giving the candidate a formal endorsement. In February, Trump would claim that he told Brady not to endorse him.









