LONDON – James Phillips held a Hoegaarden in his right hand as he leaned over the bar at The Harcourt Arms and chatted with the barkeep.
Amiable, worldly and knowledgeable about sports, he quickly became the ideal conversational partner for an American in London wondering whether the National Football League has any chance of becoming popular in Great Britain.
Phillips, 55, visited New Orleans five times, the last on the eve of the Super Bowl in February. He's a soccer fan — Tottenham Hotspur is his team — and follows cricket and rugby, among other sports.
He didn't know that the Vikings were scheduled to play the Steelers on Sunday at Wembley Stadium, but he did not dismiss the league's chances in the UK.
"There are people here who aren't so keen on what you call soccer, and I have found that they are the ones that are interested in American football,'' he said. "We do get the Super Bowl on the telly here, and there are people who would not otherwise be interested in football who will watch.
"There's no doubt that a proper competitive game is a draw. This game at Wembley is not a friendly, right? People do not want to see friendlies.''
A friendly is an exhibition soccer match, much like an NFL preseason game.
"Even some English soccer games that are friendlies attract an under-capacity crowd,'' Phillips said. "They're only taken 50-60 percent seriously. That's not what people want here. Any kind of competitive sport, people are interested in.''