U.S. to play Mexico in flag football during Super Bowl week

After NFL stars showcase their talents in a flag football game as part of Pro Bowl festivities next month, Team USA will clash with rival Mexico as a precursor to the sport’s Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

The Pro Bowl games, now scheduled during Super Bowl week, will take place in San Francisco with NFL players competing on Feb. 3. Two days later, the U.S.-Mexico exhibition at the Moscone Center is expected to attract more attention to the sport, which was added to the Olympics in October 2023.

In the 2028 Games, former or current NFL players might join current flag football stars on the team rosters. USA Football oversees the selection and training of both the men’s and women’s Olympic teams.

“The opportunity to have NFL players join our elite talent pathway leading up to the LA28 Olympics is exciting for athletes and fans alike,” USA Football CEO Scott Hallenbeck said Tuesday in a statement. “We have one goal for the Olympics, and that’s to win the men’s and women’s gold medals. Support and interest from elite athletes across the sports world only strengthens our chances of success as we seek to build the best teams possible.”

Though the Team USA-Mexico matchup is considered a “friendly,” both teams are adamant that their players will give it their all for bragging rights. The countries were slated to compete in the gold medal match at the IFAF Americas Continental Championship last September in Panama, but the event was canceled due to severe weather.

“This matchup is overdue. Our guys want it, and I’m sure Team Mexico does, too,” Team USA quarterback Darrell “Housh” Doucette III said. “We plan to approach this exhibition with the same preparation and intensity as a regular game. This is a dream opportunity to showcase the sport we all love while at the center of football’s biggest stage.”

“This opportunity that both teams are going to have is incredible,” said defensive back Ramon Alonso Gaxiola, who is also Mexico’s captain. “Playing a final is something we have always dreamed of.”

–Field Level Media

Oct 23, 2021; Lawrence, Kansas, USA; A general view of the Big 12 Conference logo on the field after the game between the Kansas Jayhawks and the Oklahoma Sooners at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports

Report: Big 12 considering bowl game in Mexico

The Big 12 Conference is looking at bringing a bowl game to Monterrey, Mexico, ESPN reported.

The bowl game, reportedly targeted to begin with the 2026 postseason, would be the first in Mexico between two U.S. college football teams.

It would be the second game on the current bowl calendar to take place outside of the U.S., joining the Bahamas Bowl.

The league is said to be still exploring potential sponsors as well as a league pairing for the proposed bowl game.

Big 12 schools are also expected to begin playing exhibition games against local teams in baseball and women’s soccer as part of an overall initiative to develop the league’s footprint south of the border, per the report.

–Field Level Media

Punter Matt Araiza sends one downfield on the opening day of the Buffalo Bills training camp at St. John Fisher University in Rochester Sunday, July 24, 2022.

Sd 072422 Bills Camp 17 Spts

Ex-Bills P Matt Araiza seeks second chance at NFL

Former Bills punter Matt Araiza passed on an offer to play in Mexico and is holding out for another shot at the NFL, six months after Buffalo released him amid allegations of sex crimes, ESPN reported Monday.

Reports circulated last week that Araiza had signed with Tijuana Galgos of Mexico’s Professional American Football League, and the team announced his arrival for the upcoming spring season on Twitter.

However, the ESPN report said the punter never signed his contract and preferred to remain a free agent, citing his agent, Joe Linta.

The Bills selected the former San Diego State punter in the sixth round of the 2022 NFL Draft, and he dazzled in training camp. But Buffalo released him in August, two days after Araiza was named in a civil lawsuit that claimed he was one of three Aztecs players involved in the alleged gang rape of a 17-year-old girl at Araiza’s off-campus San Diego home in October 2021.

The San Diego County District Attorney’s Office announced in December that Araiza would not face charges.

“Ultimately, prosecutors determined it is clear the evidence does not support the filing of criminal charges and there is no path to a potential criminal conviction,” the DA’s office said in a statement. “Prosecutors can only file charges when they ethically believe they can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.”

The lawsuit filed in San Diego County Superior Court named Araiza and 2021 San Diego State teammates Zavier Leonard and Nowlin “Pa’a” Ewaliko. No charges were filed against Leonard or Ewaliko, either.

Araiza, 22, earned the nickname “Punt God” for his pattern of long booming kicks at San Diego State, where he joined legendary runner Marshall Faulk (1992, 1993) as the lone unanimous All-Americans in program history.

Araiza won the Ray Guy Award in 2021 as the nation’s top punter and finished the season with a NCAA-record 51.19-yard average.

–Field Level Media