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Styx & Foreigner Concert Tickets at Jiffy Lube Live in Bristow, VA in Charlottesville, Virginia For Sale

Styx & Foreigner Concert Tickets at Jiffy Lube Live in Bristow, VA
Price: $500
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

Styx & Foreigner Tickets at Jiffy Lube Live
Bristow, VA
June 20,xxxx
View Styx & Foreigner Tickets at Jiffy Lube Live
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Styx & Foreigner
Hard Rock Live - Mississippi
Biloxi, MS
Friday
4/11/xxxx
8:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
INTRUST Bank Arena
Wichita, KS
Wednesday
5/14/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre
Oklahoma City, OK
Friday
5/16/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie
Grand Prairie, TX
Saturday
5/17/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
Spring, TX
Sunday
5/18/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Germain Arena
Estero, FL
Thursday
5/22/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
St. Augustine Amphitheatre
Saint Augustine, FL
Friday
5/23/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre At Encore Park
Alpharetta, GA
Saturday
5/24/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
The Wharf Amphitheatre
Orange Beach, AL
Sunday
5/25/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Tuscaloosa Amphitheater
Tuscaloosa, AL
Thursday
5/29/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Charter Amphitheatre at Heritage Park
Simpsonville, SC
Friday
5/30/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte (Formerly Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre)
Charlotte, NC
Saturday
5/31/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach (Formerly Virginia Beach Amphitheatre)
Virginia Beach, VA
Sunday
6/1/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
The Shoe at Horseshoe Casino
Cincinnati, OH
Thursday
6/5/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
FirstMerit Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island (formerly Charter One Pavilion)
Chicago, IL
Friday
6/6/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater - MO
Maryland Heights, MO
Saturday
6/7/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Starlight Theatre
Kansas City, MO
Sunday
6/8/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Blue Hills Bank Pavilion (formerly Bank of America Pavilion)
Boston, MA
Thursday
6/19/xxxx
6:30 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Jiffy Lube Live (Formerly Nissan Pavilion)
Bristow, VA
Friday
6/20/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Budweiser Summer Stage At Tags
Big Flats, NY
Saturday
6/21/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Turning Stone Resort & Casino - Events Center
Verona, NY
Monday
6/23/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Nikon at Jones Beach Theater
Wantagh, NY
Saturday
6/28/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
MGM Grand Theater At Foxwoods
Mashantucket, CT
Sunday
6/29/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Toyota Pavilion At Montage Mountain (formerly Ford Pavilion)
Scranton, PA
Friday
7/4/xxxx
8:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Darling's Waterfront Pavilion (Formerly Bangor Waterfront Park)
Bangor, ME
Saturday
7/5/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion At Meadowbrook
Gilford, NH
Sunday
7/6/xxxx
6:30 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Constellation Brands Performing Arts Center
Canandaigua, NY
Wednesday
7/9/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Freedom Hill Amphitheatre
Sterling Heights, MI
Thursday
7/10/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Target Center
Minneapolis, MN
Thursday
7/17/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Moondance Jam
Walker, MN
Friday
7/18/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Winnavegas Casino
Sloan, IA
Saturday
7/19/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Fiddlers Green Amphitheatre (formerly Comfort Dental Amphitheatre)
Englewood, CO
Tuesday
7/22/xxxx
6:30 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Usana Amphitheatre
Salt Lake City, UT
Wednesday
7/23/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Orleans Arena - The Orleans Hotel
Las Vegas, NV
Friday
7/25/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Styx & Foreigner
Greek Theatre - Los Angeles CA
Los Angeles, CA
Saturday
7/26/xxxx
TBD
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Styx & Foreigner
Santa Barbara Bowl
Santa Barbara, CA
Sunday
7/27/xxxx
TBD
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The two-minute warning is not used in college football, except in rare cases where the scoreboard clock has malfunctioned and is not being used.There is an option to use instant replay review of officiating decisions. Division I FBS (formerly Division I-A) schools use replay in virtually all games; replay is rarely used in lower division games. Every play is subject to booth review with coaches only having one challenge. In the NFL, only scoring plays, turnovers, the final 2:00 of each half and all overtime periods are reviewed, and coaches are issued two challenges (with the option for a 3rd if the first two are successful).Starting in the xxxx season, the ball is placed on the 25-yard line following a touchback on a kickoff. At all other levels of football, plus all other touchback situations under NCAA rules, the ball is placed on the 20.Among other rule changes in xxxx, kickoffs were moved from the 35-yard line back five yards to the 30-yard line, matching a change that the NFL had made in xxxx. Some coaches and officials questioned this rule change as it could lead to more injuries to the players as there will likely be more kickoff returns.[11] The rationale for the rule change was to help reduce dead time in the game.[12] The NFL returned its kickoff location to the 35-yard line effective in xxxx; college football did not do so until xxxx.if a player is penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct for actions that occurred during a play ending in a touchdown by that team, but before the goal line was crossed, the touchdown will be nullified. In the NFL, the same foul would result in a penalty on the conversion attempt or ensuing kickoff, at the option of the non-penalized team.If a team is penalized in the final minute of a half and the penalty causes the clock to stop, the opposing team now has the right to have 10 seconds run off the clock in addition to the yardage penalty. The NFL has a similar rule in the final minute of the half, but it applies only to specified violations against the offensive team. The new NCAA rule applies to penalties on both sides of the ball.Starting in xxxx season, the four Division I FBS teams will be selected at the end of regular season to compete in a playoff for the FBS national championship. The College Football Playoff will replace the Bowl Championship Series, which had been used as the selection method to determine the national championship game participants starting in the xxxx season.At the Division I FCS level, the teams participate in a 24-team playoff (most recently expanded from 20 teams in xxxx) to determine the national championship. Under the current playoff structure, the top eight teams are all seeded, and receive a bye week in the first round. The highest seed receives automatic home field advantage. Starting in xxxx, non-seeded teams can only host a playoff game if both teams involved are unseeded; in such a matchup, the schools must bid for the right to host the game. Selection for the playoffs is determined by a selection committee, although usually a team must have a 7-4 record to even be considered. Losses to an FBS team count against their playoff eligibility, while wins against a Division II opponent do not count towards playoff consideration. Thus, only Division I wins (whether FBS, FCS, or FCS non-scholarship) are considered for playoff selection. The Division I National Championship game is held in Frisco, Texas.Unlike other college football divisions and most other sports?collegiate or professional?the Football Bowl Subdivision, formerly known as Division I-A college football, has historically not employed a playoff system to determine a champion. Instead, it has a series of postseason "bowl games". The annual National Champion in the Football Bowl Subdivision is then instead traditionally determined by a vote of sports writers and other non-players. This system has been challenged often, beginning with an NCAA committee proposal in xxxx to have a four-team playoff following the bowl games.[15] However, little headway was made in instituting a playoff tournament until xxxx, given the entrenched vested economic interests in the various bowls. Although the NCAA publishes lists of claimed FBS-level national champions in its official publications, it has never recognized an official FBS national championship; this policy will continue even after the establishment of the College Football Playoff (which will not be directly run by the NCAA) in xxxx. As a result, the official Division I National Champion is the winner of the Football Championship Subdivision, as it is the highest level of football with an NCAA-administered championship tournament.The first bowl game was the xxxx Rose Bowl, played between Michigan and Stanford; Michigan won 49-0. It ended when Stanford requested and Michigan agreed to end it with 8 minutes on the clock. That game was so lopsided that the game was not played annually until xxxx, when the Tournament of Roses decided to reattempt the postseason game. The term "bowl" originates from the shape of the Rose Bowl stadium in Pasadena, California, which was built in xxxx and resembled the Yale Bowl, built in xxxx. This is where the name came into use, as it became known as the Rose Bowl Game. Other games came along and used the term "bowl", whether the stadium was shaped like a bowl or not.At the Division I FBS level, teams must earn the right to be bowl eligible by winning at least 6 games during the season (teams that play 13 games in a season, which is allowed for Hawaii and any of its home opponents, must win 7 games). They are then invited to a bowl game based on their conference ranking and the tie-ins that the conference has to each bowl game. For the xxxx season, there were 34 bowl games, so 68 of the 120 Division I FBS teams were invited to play at a bowl. These games are played from mid-December to early January and most of the later bowl games are typically considered more prestigious.Partly as a compromise between both bowl game and playoff supporters, the NCAA created the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) in xxxx in order to create a definitive National Championship game for college football. The series included the four most prominent bowl games (Rose Bowl, Orange Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Fiesta Bowl), while the National Championship game rotated each year between one of these venues. If, for example, the Rose Bowl was to be played as the National Championship one year, the other three games of the series followed their normal procedures for picking teams, such as considering conference champions and at-large bids. The ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, Pac-12, and SEC champions were all guaranteed a spot in one of the BCS games, while the remaining spots went to at-large teams.The BCS selection committee used a complicated, and often controversial, computer system to rank all Division 1-FBS teams and the top two teams at the end of the season played for the National Championship. This computer system, which factored in newspaper polls, online polls, coaches' polls, strength of schedule, and various other factors of a team's season, led to much dispute over whether the two best teams in the country were being selected to play in the National Championship game. The BCS system was slightly adjusted in xxxx, as the NCAA added a fifth game to the series, called the National Championship Game. This allowed the four other BCS bowls to use their normal selection process to select the teams in their games while the top two teams in the BCS rankings would play in the new National Championship Game.Canadian football, which parallels American football, is played by collegiate teams in Canada under the auspices of Canadian Interuniversity Sport. (Unlike in the United States, no junior colleges play football in Canada, and the sanctioning body for junior college athletics in Canada, CCAA, does not sanction the sport.) Organized competition in American football also exists at the collegiate level in Mexico (ONEFA), the UK (British Universities American Football League), Japan (Japan American Football Association, Koshien Bowl), and South Korea (Korea American Football Association).The NCAA Division II National Football Championship began in xxxx. Prior to xxxx, four regional bowl games were played in order to provide postseason action for what was then called the NCAA College Division and a poll determined the final champion.The National Championship game was held at Sacramento, California from xxxx?xxxx. It was in Wichita Falls, Texas in xxxx?xxxx. The game was played in Longview, Texas in xxxx. For xxxx and xxxx, Albuquerque, New Mexico hosted the game. McAllen, Texas hosted the championship games from xxxx?xxxx. Since xxxx the Division II championship game has been played annually at Braly Municipal Stadium near the campus of the University of North Alabama in Florence, Alabama. Between xxxx and xxxx, the championship game will be played at Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kansas.[1] Since xxxx the games have been broadcast on ESPN.National football championship trophy room at Bearcat Stadium at Northwest Missouri State University. The two trophies in the middle are national championships in xxxx and xxxx. The four trophies on the left are for appearances in the title games in xxxx, xxxx, xxxx, and xxxx. Northwest also appeared in the xxxx national championship game an unprecedented fifth time in a row against Grand Valley State which defeated Northwest twice before in title games The National Football League (NFL) is a professional American football league that constitutes one of the four major professional sports leagues in North America. It is composed of 32 teams divided equally between the National Football Conference (NFC) and the American Football Conference (AFC). The highest professional level of the sport in the world,[4] the NFL runs a 17-week regular season from the week after Labor Day to the week after Christmas, with each team playing sixteen games and having one bye week each season. Out of the league's 32 teams, six (four division winners and two wild-card teams) from each conference compete in the NFL playoffs, a single-elimination tournament culminating in the Super Bowl, played between the champions of the NFC and AFC. The champions of the Super Bowl are awarded the Vince Lombardi Trophy. Various other awards exist to recognize individual players and coaches. Most games are played on Sunday afternoons; some games are also played on Mondays and Thursdays during the regular season. There are games on Saturdays during the first two playoff weekends. Sometimes, there are also Saturday games during the last few weeks of the regular season.The NFL was formed on August 20, xxxx, as the American Professional Football Conference; the league changed its name to the American Professional Football Association (APFA) on September 17, xxxx, and changed its name to the National Football League on June 24, xxxx, after spending the xxxx and xxxx seasons as the APFA. In xxxx, the NFL agreed to merge with the rival American Football League (AFL), effective xxxx; the first Super Bowl was held at the end of that same season in January xxxx. Today, the NFL has the highest average attendance (67,591) of any professional sports league in the world[5] and is the most popular sports league in the United States. The Super Bowl is among the biggest club sporting events in the world[6] and individual Super Bowl games account for many of the most-watched television programs in American history.[7] At the corporate level, the NFL is a nonprofit 501(c)(6) association. The NFL's executive officer is the commissioner, who has broad authority in governing the league.Each team is allowed to have up to 53 players during the regular season, but only 46 can be active (eligible to play) on game days. Teams are given exclusive rights to sign free agents that have three or fewer seasons in the league, but free agents that have been in the league at least four years can sign with any team of their choosing. Each team is subject to a salary cap. The champions of the most recent season, the xxxx season, are the Seattle Seahawks, who defeated the Denver Broncos by a score of 43-8 in Super Bowl XLVIII. The team with the most championships is the Green Bay Packers, who have won 13 championships. The team that currently has the most Super Bowl championships is the Pittsburgh Steelers, who have won six.On August 20, xxxx, a meeting was held by representatives of the Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Cleveland Indians, and Dayton Triangles at the Jordan and Hupmobile auto showroom in Canton, Ohio. This meeting resulted in the formation of the American Professional Football Conference (APFC), a group who, according to the Canton Evening Repository, intended to "raise the standard of professional football in every way possible, to eliminate bidding for players between rival clubs and to secure cooperation in the formation of schedules".[8] Another meeting held on September 17, xxxx resulted in the renaming of the league to the American Professional Football Association (APFA).[8] The league hired Jim Thorpe as their first president, and consisted of 14 teams. Only two of these teams, the Decatur Staleys (now the Chicago Bears) and the Chicago Cardinals (now the Arizona Cardinals), remain.[9]Although the league did not maintain official standings for their xxxx inaugural season and teams played schedules that included non-league opponents, the APFA awarded the Akron Pros the championship by virtue of their 8?0?3 (8 wins, 0 losses, and 3 ties) record.[10] The following season resulted in the Chicago Staleys controversially winning the title over the Buffalo All-Americans.[11] In xxxx, the APFA changed its name to the National Football League (NFL).[12]In xxxx, the season ended with the Chicago Bears (6-1-6) and the Portsmouth Spartans (6-1-4) tied for first in the league standings.[13] At the time, teams were ranked on a single table and the team with the highest winning percentage (not including ties, which were not counted towards the standings) at the end of the season was declared the champion. This method had been used since the league's creation in xxxx, but no situation had been encountered where two teams were tied for first. The league quickly determined that a playoff game between Chicago and Portsmouth was needed to decide the league's champion. The teams were originally scheduled to play the playoff game, officially a regular season game that would count towards the regular season standings, at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois, but a combination of heavy snow and extreme cold forced the game to be moved indoors to Chicago Stadium, which did not have a regulation-size football field. Playing with altered rules to accommodate the smaller playing field, the Bears won the game 9-0 and thus won the championship. Fan interest in the de facto championship game led the NFL, beginning in xxxx, to split into two divisions with a championship game to be played between the division champions.[14] The xxxx season also marked the first of 13 seasons in which African Americans were prohibited from playing in the league. The ban was rescinded in xxxx, following public pressure and the removal of a similar ban in Major League Baseball.[15]Up until the xxxxs, the NFL was the dominant professional football league and faced little competition. Rival leagues included three separate American Football Leagues and the All-America Football Conference (AAFC), none of which lasted for more than four seasons (although several teams from the AAFC joined the NFL after the league dissolved in xxxx). A new professional league, the fourth American Football League (AFL), began play in xxxx. The upstart AFL began to challenge the established NFL in popularity, gaining lucrative television contracts and engaging in a bidding war with the NFL for free agents and draft picks. The two leagues announced a merger on June 8, xxxx, to take full effect in xxxx. In the meantime, the leagues would hold a common draft and championship game. The game, the Super Bowl, was held four times before the merger, with the NFL winning Super Bowl I and Super Bowl II, and the AFL winning Super Bowl III and Super Bowl IV.[16] After the league merged, it was split into two conferences: the National Football Conference (NFC), consisting of most of the pre-merger NFL teams, and the American Football Conference (AFC), consisting of all of the AFL teams as well as three pre-merger NFL teams.[17]Today, the NFL is considered the most popular sports league in North America; much of its growth is attributed to former Commissioner Pete Rozelle, who led the league from xxxx to xxxx. Overall annual attendance increased from three million at the beginning of his tenure to seventeen million by the end of his tenure, and 400 million viewers watched xxxx's Super Bowl XXIII. The NFL established NFL Properties in xxxx. The league's licensing wing, NFL Properties earns the league billions of dollars annually; Rozelle's tenure also marked the creation of NFL Charities and a national partnership with United Way.[18] Paul Tagliabue was elected as commissioner to succeed Rozelle; his seventeen-year tenure, which ended in xxxx, was marked by large increases in television contracts and the addition of four expansion teams,[19] as well as the introduction of league initiatives to increase the number of minorities in league and team management roles.[20] The league's current Commissioner, Roger Goodell, has focused on reducing the number of illegal hits and making the sport safer, mainly through fining or suspending players who break rules.[21] These actions are one of many the NFL is taking to reduce concussions and improve player safety.[22]From xxxx to xxxx, the NFL did not have a set number of games for teams to play, instead setting a minimum. The league mandated a 12-game regular season for each team beginning in xxxx, later shortening this to 11 games in xxxx and 10 games in xxxx, mainly due to World War II. After the war ended, the number of games returned to 11 games in xxxx and to 12 in xxxx. The NFL went to a 14-game schedule in xxxx, which it retained until switching to the current 16-game schedule in xxxx.[23] Proposals to increase the regular season to 18 games have been made, but have been rejected in labor negotiations with the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA).[24]The NFL operated in a two-conference system from xxxx to xxxx, where the champions of each conference would meet in the NFL Championship Game. If two teams tied for the conference lead, they would meet in a one-game playoff to determine the conference champion. In xxxx, the NFL expanded from 15 teams to 16 teams. Instead of just evening out the conferences by adding the expansion New Orleans Saints to the seven-member Western Conference, the NFL realigned the conferences and split each into two four-team divisions. The four conference champions would meet in the NFL playoffs, a two-round playoff.[25] The NFL also operated the Playoff Bowl (officially the Bert Bell Benefit Bowl) from xxxx to xxxx. Effectively a third-place game, pitting the two conference runners-up against each other, the league considers Playoff Bowls to have been exhibitions rather than playoff games. The league discontinued the Playoff Bowl in xxxx due to its perception as a game for losers.[26]Following the addition of the former AFL teams into the NFL in xxxx, the NFL split into two conferences with three divisions each. The expanded league, now with twenty-six teams,[17] would also feature an expanded eight-team eight playoff, the participants being the three division champions from each conference as well as one 'wild card' team (the team with the best win percentage) from each conference. In xxxx, the league added a second wild card team from each conference, bringing the total number of playoff teams to ten, and a further two wild card teams were added in xxxx to bring the total to twelve. When the NFL expanded to 32 teams in xxxx, the league realigned, changing the division structure from three divisions in each conference to four divisions in each conference. As each division champion gets a playoff bid, the number of wild card teams from each conference dropped from three to two.[27]The National Football League is an unincorporated nonprofit 501(c)(6) association,[28] meaning its league office is not subject to income tax because it does not make a profit. In contrast, each individual team (except the non-profit Green Bay Packers[29]) is subject to tax because they make a profit.[30] The NFL considers itself a trade association made up of and financed by its 32 member teams.[31]The league has three defined officers: the commissioner, secretary, and treasurer. Each conference has one officer, the president. The commissioner is elected by affirmative vote of two-thirds or 18 (whichever is greater) of the members of the league, while the president of each conference is elected by an affirmative vote of three-fourths or ten of the conference members.[32] The commissioner appoints the secretary and treasurer and has broad authority in disputes between clubs, players, coaches, and employees. He is the "principal executive officer"[33] of the NFL and also has authority in hiring league employees, negotiating television contracts, disciplining individuals that own part or all of an NFL team, clubs, or employed individuals of an NFL club if they have violated league bylaws or committed "conduct detrimental to the welfare of the League or professional football".[33] The commissioner can, in the event of misconduct by a party associated with the league, suspend individuals, hand down a fine of up to US$500,000, cancel contracts with the league, and award or strip teams of draft picks.[33]