George Osborne wants to have an NFL franchise based permanently in London within the next five years to confirm the city's status as the "sporting capital of the world".
The Chancellor of the Exchequer met with NFL executives, team owners and former players at Downing Street ahead of the Miami Dolphins meeting the New York Jets at Wembley on Sunday.
Osborne said he would "love to have a team here based in the UK playing in the NFL" and believes "we are making steps towards that" goal.
"The real prize, the touchdown for London, would be to get a team based here," he said.
When asked about the potential time frame for a team coming to London, Osborne said: "Hopefully it is something we could achieve in the next few years, maybe four or five years time.
"These things can't change overnight because obviously teams are already based in some home cities in the States.
"But I am in talks with the NFL, sorting out the arrangements.
"They get such a huge welcome, teams like the Dolphins and the Jets when they come here, there is a big fan base here and it would mean a huge amount for our economy because it would confirm London as the sporting capital of the world and that is what I want to see."
The Press Association asked Mark Waller, the NFL's executive vice president international, if it was a question of when, rather than if, London would get its own franchise.
"I would certainly hope so, yes," he said. "We have always said our goal here is to build a fanbase that would be able to support a franchise."
Waller continued: "We have always said that we felt that we started in 2007 with the games and we felt it was a 15-year process so that would give us years '21, '22 and that feels sort of right - five or six years."
The NFL already has an annual presence in the UK with regular season games now being played at Wembley.
After the Jets and the Dolphins meet on Sunday, the Buffalo Bills will play the Jacksonville Jaguars on October 25, before the Detroit Lions take on the Kansas City Chiefs on November 1.
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