Posted on 05/30/2007 8:55:44 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
Just require that all players graduate from college. That would get rid of the hip-hop crowd right there.
I’m so starved for football this time of year I watch European NFL when I can catch it, and CFL when their season starts.
CFL has about the same number of teams the UFL would have. They play each other so much it’s incestuous. As small as the CFL is, though, it hasn’t been that long since they had two teams with the same damn names ... the Ottawa Roughriders and the Saskatchewan Roughriders.
By the "Justice Brothers" I'm sure. Maybe Sharpton could tell some "yo' mama's so fat" jokes to Cuban via bullhorn like he does in the Shanklin parody he did at "Obama HQ"?
Mark Cubam looks like he is trying to keep his name in the news since his Mavs are long gone from the NBA playoffs. Go Spurs!
They would be stupid to put a franchise here in Texas if they play in the fall on Friday nights. High school football owns Friday nights here in the Texas in the Fall.
You don’t schedule anything on Friday night if you want attendence for your event and that includes college football.
They are working on getting back to Ottawa but in the meantime Saskatchewan is it. The big difference I recall is one had the name run together and the other split the two words. :)
I hope they don’t lose any more teams. The CFL might not be viable with any less.
They left one failure out. The CFL tried to crack the US market at one point. It didn’t work. Prehaps the writer is too young to remember the Shreveport Pirates (I’ve forgotten the other US teams.)
Since about the 70s the CFL has been a continuous tighrope walk but financially these days it is in better shape than it has been in a long time. Its no powerhouse but it does chug along. It has a very long history too and that sort of helps.
there were about half a dozen....the Baltimore team won the championship one year but that was the height of it all
The Baltimore Stallions did well. But then in 1995 the Cleveland Browns moved to Baltimore and became the Ravens. That was the end of the Stallions right there.
Don’t forget the WFL. A lot of NFL players jumped to it, including Larry Csonka, Jim Kiick, Paul Warfield, Craig Morton and Calvin Hill. They had a twenty game season.
Someone please give this writer a history lesson! In 1922 The American Professional Football Association changed its name to the National Football League (the same year the Chicago Staleys became the Bears). Since that time, rival pro leagues playing American football have included the AFL I in 1926, the AFL II in 1936, the AFL III in 1940, the All America Football Conference in 1946 (which gave the NFL the Browns, Colts, and 49ers), the AFL IV in 1960, the Continental Football League in 1965, the WFL in 1974, the USFL in 1983, and the XFL in 2001.
Had a team here in SA, the Wings.
Best thing about the league was the mandatory two-point try after a TD - the extra-point kick is the most useless activity in sports, including rhythmic gymnastics.
Somewhat off topic here...but what about the World Football League back in the 70s? I wasn’t around—as in not alive—but that only lasted one season, correct? The financial backing between that and this proposed thing will be vastly different I would surmise, but if any example can be looked at, the WFL has to be thrown into the mix as well.
You are right. The players are covered in tattoo's, they bring their "Posse's" with them wherever they go. Granted, they are probably the best athletes in the world, but basically, it's gangsta ball.
Bring back He Hate Me.
There was a team in Baltimore, too, and also Las Vegas IIRC.
wikipedia: “In 1993, the league admitted its first United States franchise, the Sacramento Gold Miners, in an attempt to broaden Canadian football’s popular appeal and boost league revenues. The ultimate plan was to have a league of ten Canadian and ten American teams. Spearheading the efforts were two former World League of American Football owners, Fred Anderson and Larry J. Benson, who would each receive a franchise. While the first incarnation of Benson’s team, the San Antonio Texans, would not play a single down, the Gold Miners would see action, finishing with a record of 6 wins and 12 losses, placing last in the West Division.
“The following year saw the addition of the Las Vegas Posse, the Shreveport Pirates, and the Baltimore CFL Colts (who were forced to change their name to the Stallions after a long legal battle). Baltimore was the most successful of the American CFL teams, finishing second in the East and becoming the first American team to play for the Grey Cup.
” 1995 saw the loss of the Posse and the move of the Gold Miners to San Antonio, while the Birmingham Barracudas and Memphis Mad Dogs were added. However, fan interest in Canadian football, with the possible exception of the Baltimore Stallions, was sparse at best. At the end of the year, which saw the Stallions become the first American team to win the Grey Cup, all United States teams with the exception of the Stallions and the re-launched San Antonio Texans folded because of financial difficulties. When the National Football League announced that a new team was to be added in Baltimore, the Stallions looked at the possibility of relocating to nearby Richmond, Virginia, but later moved to Montreal, becoming the Alouettes. The Texans would later fold with a similar explanation.”
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