IFAF president Pierre Trochet at the Philadelphia Eagles community day at Clube Recreativo CERET. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

As expected, owners have paved the way for NFL players to take part in the 2028 Olympics. Several details are still to be worked out, with agreements including the NFLPA and International Olympic Committee (IOC) necessary for NFLers to suit up in Los Angeles.

Plenty of time remains for that to take place, and a framework regarding playing surfaces, insurance against injury and adjustments to training camp schedules has already been voted on. Owners passed a resolution that would allow for one player per team per country to participate (with players classified as international roster exemptions also eligible). Six countries are slated to play in the event’s Olympic debut with 10-man rosters.

As preparations continue to take place, this is a good time to look back at the history of flag football at the international level. The 2028 Games will (presumably) be the first time active NFL players take part on a national scale, but they will carry on a trend of international competition in football (including the flag version) which dates back more than two decades.

IFAF, the International Federation of American Football, currently led by president Pierre Trochet, was founded in 1998. In the case of several countries, that development took place long after their own national federations were put in place (Canada’s, for instance, was more than one century old by that point). The first-ever world championship for tackle football took place in 1999, and it is held every four years. Similarly, the world championship for the flag version of the sport began in 2002, for both men and women, and it takes place every second year.

Austria won gold in each of the first two editions of the men’s world flag championship, winning the event again in 2012. France and Canada took home the prize in the intervening events. Team USA won the gold medal for the first time in 2010, and that feat has been repeated during each of the past five tournaments. In a similar fashion, the American women’s team has won each of the past three world championships after a total of five countries combined to win the first eight editions of the event.

As part of the ongoing development of flag football on a global level, IFAF received provisional status from the IOC in 2013 and recognized status 10 years later. The latter designation paved the way for flag football to be confirmed as an Olympic event, allowing for further growth on the world stage. The NFL played a leading role in that development, and the league has made a point to foster increased participation in flag football in recent years (with an NFL-sponsored league potentially on the horizon).

Thirty-two of IFAF’s 76 member countries qualified for the most recent men’s world flag championship, with six continents being represented for the first time. Continental championships serve as a qualifying path for the world championships, so it would come as no surprise if that were to also be the case in advance of the Olympics. A wide range of possibilities exists with respect to which countries will join the American hosts in Los Angeles.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Commanders, Dan Quinn setting the tone on Day 1 of OTAs: 'We are always the hunters'
Browns' Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett open up about four-way QB competition
Charlie Woods follows in dad's footsteps with first junior win
Giants teammates offer high praise for Russell Wilson amid OTAs
Raiders appear to have contract dispute with promising WR
Mammoth stay busy, ink another former first-round pick to entry-level contract
Mammoth sign former No. 6 overall pick to entry-level contract
Oilers' Zach Hyman out for Game 5, unlikely to return in series
Paige Bueckers makes history with impressive start to WNBA career
Steelers Hall of Famer rips team over Aaron Rodgers interest
Three takeaways from Knicks-Pacers Game 4: Tyrese Haliburton makes history in win
Stars-Oilers takeaways: Edmonton on verge of return to Stanley Cup Final 
Watch: Phillies' Bryce Harper leaves game after taking fastball to elbow
Bills' high-profile offseason addition suffers calf injury
Coco Gauff racket mishap proves to be no problem in opening match at French Open
Canadiens goalie leaves North America to sign massive five-year deal
WNBA releases findings of investigation of alleged racist comments directed at Angel Reese
Cubs star Kyle Tucker sends seven-word message after $600 million news
Bruins reportedly shopping top forward in potential offseason shake-up
Bears head coach Ben Johnson apparently lit up Caleb Williams at practice