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Spring Football League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spring Football League
SportAmerican football
Founded2000
Ceased2000
CommissionerBill Futterer
No. of teams4
Last
champion(s)
San Antonio Matadors, Houston Marshals
Los Angeles Dragons vs San Antonio Matadors
Houston Marshals vs Miami Tropics
The San Antonio Matadors and the Miami Tropics played the last professional game at the Orange Bowl.

The Spring Football League (SFL) was a short lived professional american football minor league that existed for only one season in 2000.

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Transcription

Spring football

Founded by several ex-NFL players such as Eric Dickerson, Drew Pearson, Bo Jackson, and Tony Dorsett, the SFL planned to use the four-game mini-season (dubbed "Festival 2000") to test cities, fans, stadiums, the media, entertainment, and springtime American football as a product. The year before, the Regional Football League staggered through a spring season, then announced it would not return for 2000.

In late 1999, the SFL announced an inaugural season of 2000, with ten individually-owned teams playing a 12-week schedule, followed by a championship game during Memorial Day weekend. Mark Rice, chairman of the SFL board of governors, placed eight of the franchises in Birmingham; Canton, Ohio; Houston; Jackson, Mississippi; Los Angeles; Miami; San Antonio and Washington, D.C. On March 1, 2000, the SFL announced the league had scaled down to four teams that would play four-game schedules on Saturdays from April 29, followed by a championship game in Miami on May 27.[1]

Teams

Team City Stadium Head coach
Houston Marshals Houston, Texas Robertson Stadium Ray Woodard
Miami Tropics Miami, Florida Miami Orange Bowl Jim Jensen
San Antonio Matadors San Antonio, Texas Alamo Stadium Brian Wiggins
 Los Angeles Dragons Los Angeles, California Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Doug Cosbie

SFL teams consisted of 38 players, each of whom would receive $1,200 per game with a $200 winners bonus.

The league's games included pre-game and half-time shows featuring national musical acts (such as The O'Jays, Mark Wills, and Poncho Sanchez), a pronounced effort to attract both African-Americans and Latino fans, and innovative use of wireless communication.

SFL coaches of note:

Mini-season cut short

The Spring Football League suffered from a distinct lack of media attention: newspaper coverage was spotty at best, and the SFL had no radio or TV contracts (although some games were apparently carried on the internet). Attendance was disastrously low, despite some very competitive contests; only 1,100 people showed up at the one game played at cavernous Los Angeles Coliseum. The SFL wasn't even able to finish out its modest, one-month season—league officials ended the test program after only two weeks and four games. Houston and San Antonio, both with 2–0 records, were declared league co-champions.

The SFL planned to return in 2001 with at least eight teams. However, with funding for the league having been provided by tech-stock entrepreneurs, any chance that the SFL would return was scotched by the tech-market crash of 2000 and the subsequent announcement of the XFL by the WWF.

The last professional football game played at the Miami Orange Bowl was an SFL game: a crowd estimated at "less than a thousand" watched on April 29, 2000 as the San Antonio Matadors defeated the Miami Tropics, 16-14.


References

  1. ^ "Associated Press story on SFL". Archived from the original on 2016-10-01. Retrieved 2017-09-15.

External links

This page was last edited on 10 March 2024, at 22:58
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