Apparently they are aiming for 25 non football events per year at the stadium so you could argue that it isn't primarily a football ground
A lot of the argument last night seemed to be about semantics about what a multi purpose stadium is and the word primarily.
The Hood was quite right to point out that it's ridiculous to compare White Hart Lane and the Tottenham Stadium as like for like multi purpose venues, the Tottenham Hotspur stadium IS an NFL stadium built purposely for that specific goal it's also a football stadium, White Hart Lane was a football stadium built for football that occasionally hosted ad hoc events, Spursdem was right to call bullshit on the part about Spurs not being the main event at the new stadium they always will be regardless of what else happens in the stadium.
If an NFL franchise (hate that word) does move in permanently the word primarily is a pointless discussion, the stadium is home to 2 teams and as long as they don't clash who gives a shit about which one is supposed to have the bigger dick?
Now scheduling doesn't really matter because I suppose we can get any game that fits Tottenham's schedule, "let's do The Chicago Pansies vs The Alabama Aholes on that date it's international break and the Aholes haven't played there yet" But what happens when a franchise does happen and that franchise has an NFL schedule to honour? The potential for schedule clashes surely exists?
To be fair i think nfl only has 8 home games excluding play offs so im sure theres enough room. They also play sundays so we can work around it