Texas Football League

The Texas Football League (TFL) was a low-level American football minor league that operated in primarily in the United States from 1966 through 1968, and again between 1970 and 1971 as a new incarnation called the Trans-American Football League (TAFL).

Texas Football League
SportAmerican football
Founded1966
Ceased1971
Claim to fameFirst spring pro football league
No. of teamsVaried (4 to 8)
CountriesUnited States
Last
champion(s)
San Antonio Toros
Most titlesSan Antonio Toros (4)

The 1971 season of the TAFL was the first season of spring pro football in United States, which made it the first spring pro football league.

History

The league, which initially comprised six franchises from Texas and Oklahoma, was formally announced in May 1966.[1] The league was supposed to begin with eight teams, but entries from Hammond, Louisiana and New Orleans were not accepted. With the addition of two franchises in 1967, the TFL expanded to two four-team divisions.

During the 1967-68 offseason the Continental Football League offered a merger of operations with the TFL, but was turned down by TFL commissioner George Schepps. He additionally challenged the CoFL to pit its champion against the TFL's champion for the 1968 campaign.[2]

On January 25, 1969, it was announced that the Continental Football League was adding the entirety of the eight-team TFL to its ranks. The TFL joined as a separate entity and was placed into the new Texas Division (itself split into East and West). The TFL teams were mostly scheduled to play against each other but did also play interleague contests.[3] Joining the Texas division was the Mexico Golden Aztecs, the first American football franchise based in Mexico. The TFL's San Antonio Toros defeated the Indianapolis Capitols, 44-38 in overtime, to capture the last Continental League championship. (The Toros would ultimately win five straight league titles from 1967-71.)

1966

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

 y  = Division Champion

Texas Football League
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
Tulsa Oilers 721.778246161Skelly StadiumFloyd Harrawood
Sherman-Denison Jets 730.700254161Bearcat StadiumDuncan McCauley
Pasadena Pistols 730.700284149Memorial StadiumDonnie Caraway
Burkburnett Kings 460.400152298Burkburnett High School StadiumE.J. Webb
Dallas County Rockets 370.300127181Eagle StadiumBill Crow/Joe Verret
Odessa-Midland Comets 181.11183196W.T. Barrett StadiumByron Townsend

1967

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

 y  = Division Champion

Eastern Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
San Antonio Toros 14001.000538137North East StadiumDuncan McCauley
Pasadena Pistols 860.571417383Auxiliary StadiumDonnie Caraway
Dallas Rockets 860.571285324Jesuit High School StadiumJoe Verret
Sherman-Denison Jets 590.357360424n/aGene Babb
Western Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
Tulsa Thunderbirds 1040.714320276Skelly StadiumArt Ramage
Fort Worth Texans 590.357346364Turnpike StadiumJohnny Hatley
Odessa-Midland Comets 3110.214247411W.T. Barrett StadiumJim Daniel
Wichita Falls Kings 3110.214255449Midwestern University StadiumE.J. Webb

1968

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

 y  = Division Champion

Eastern Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
Texarkana Titans 750.583273277Grim StadiumTom Collins
Tulsa Thunderbirds 480.333171156Auxiliary StadiumArt Ramage
Dallas Rockets 480.333249354Jesuit High School StadiumJoe Verret
Beaumont Golden Vikings 2100.167165365Greenie StadiumRoy Davidson
Western Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
San Antonio Toros 1110.917447121Alamo StadiumDuncan McCauley/Hoover Evans
Fort Worth Braves 1020.833377154Farrington FieldJohnny Hatley
Odessa Comets/West Texas Rufneks 570.417235338W.T. Barrett StadiumJim Daniel/Ted Dawson
El Paso Jets 570.417197349Dudley FieldHarold Stephens

Trans-American Football League

With the dissolution of the CoFL in early 1970, the Toros announced the formation of the Trans-American Football League, hoping to add teams in a number of major markets; the TAFL planned teams in Birmingham; Tampa; Hershey, Pennsylvania and even Los Angeles, in addition to San Antonio and existing Continental teams in Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth and Memphis (relocated from Las Vegas).[4] By the time the league played its 1970 season, it was once again mainly based in Texas, with two other Continental teams, the Omaha Mustangs and Texarkana Titans, joining the loop.

In 1971, the Trans-American Football League took the unusual step of becoming the first football league to schedule and play all of its games in the spring rather than the autumn, a move that attracted the attention of Sports Illustrated pro football columnist Tex Maule. The 1971 TAFL season ran from April 25 to June 26 .[5] Although Maule commented that the Trans-American league's four teams' Fort Worth to San Antonio lineup "barely makes it Trans-Texas", he also noted that "This is the first bona fide attempt to play spring football," a gimmick that the United States Football League did on a larger scale a decade later.

On the other hand, attendance for the four teams "reached a new low"[6] and, as sports historian Bob Gill would note in 2002, "it was clear by mid-June that the concept of spring football was dead -- and probably the Texas League along with it".[7] The TAFL folded after its spring 1971 season.

1970

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

 y  = Division Champion

Texas Football League
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
San Antonio Toros 720.800288158Harlandale Memorial StadiumGeorge Pasterchick
Texarkana Titans 730.700323175Grim StadiumDurwood Merrill
Fort Worth Braves 640.600365266Farrington FieldDuncan McCauley
Omaha Mustangs 540.556228240Johnny Rosenblatt StadiumDon Fleming
Bartlesville Quickicks 370.300185289Custer FieldArt Ramage
Dallas Rockets 190.10097358Roffino StadiumJoe Verret

1971

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

 y  = Division Champion

Trans-American Football League
TeamWLTPCTPFPAStadiumCoach
Texarkana Titans 5001.00017171n/an/a
San Antonio Toros 410.80017476North East StadiumGeorge Pasterchick
Fort Worth Braves 140.20089171Handley Fieldn/a
Dallas Rockets 050.00056172P. C. Cobb Stadiumn/a

Championship games

Season Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Venue Attendance
1966 December 3, 1966 Tulsa Oilers 30-27 Sherman-Denison Jets Skelly Stadium n/a
1967 December 2, 1967 San Antonio Toros 27-7 Tulsa Thunderbirds North East Stadium 4,000
1968 December 7, 1968 San Antonio Toros 21-16 Texarkana Titans Alamo Stadium 4.661
1970 November 21, 1970 San Antonio Toros 21-17 Fort Worth Braves Harlandale Memorial Stadium 5,523
1971 June 19, 1971 San Antonio Toros 20-19 Texarkana Titans North East Stadium 4,500[8]

Southwest Professional Football League

After the collapse of the Trans-American Football League the two bigger teams—the San Antonio Toros and the Dallas Rockets—formed a new league called the Southwest Professional Football League (SWPFL), and moved the season back to the fall.[9] The league commissioner was Pro Football Hall of Famer Ollie Matson, but the SWPFL operated on a much smaller budget than previous related leagues, and disbanded after only two seasons.[10]

1972

Southwestern Football League
TeamWLTPct.PFPANotes
San Antonio Toros 8001.00025978Champions
Las Vegas Casinos 620.75015994
Phoenix Blazers 640.600240230
Southern California Razorbacks 430.571n/an/a
Dallas Rockets 150.166n/an/a
Los Angeles Mustangs 060.00083150

1973

After the first season the SWPFL approached to the Canadian Football League to become an "American branch league of the CFL". The league even sent representative to the CFL league meeting, which were "receptive to the idea", but the SWPFL did not survive long enough to see it come to fruition.[11]

Eastern Division
TeamWLTPct.PFPA
Oklahoma City Wranglers 910.900442110
San Antonio Toros 620.750239170
Albuquerque Thunderbirds 440.500212173
Denver Oilers 170.12587372
Kansas City Steers 030.00019139
Western Division
TeamWLTPct.PFPA
Las Vegas Casinos 620.750192129
Phoenix Blazers 630.666217181
Southern California Razorbacks 360.333164147
Los Angeles Mustangs 180.111128221

Semifinals:San Antonio Toros 45 vs. Las Vegas Casinos 3

Finals:Oklahoma City Wranglers 19 vs. San Antonio Toros 16

Aftermath

The Toros continued to exist into 1974 season and joined the semi-pro Mid-America Football League, and even playing an exhibition game against the Houston Oilers on July 16. Because of a players' strike, the Oilers played with an all-rookie roster, narrowly defeating the Toros 13–7 in a much more competitive match than most NFL vs. non-NFL matches were at the time.[12]

See also

References

  1. "Semipro Football League Organized". The Corpus Christi Times. Associated Press. May 30, 1966.
  2. "Texas Loop Challenges Continental". The Abilene Reporter-News. Associated Press. March 4, 1968.
  3. "TFL Aligns With Huge Continental". The Odessa American. Associated Press. January 26, 1969.
  4. "The Evening Independent - Google News Archive Search". Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  5. "This Spring Isn't Very Green", by Tex Maule, Sports Illustrated, May 10, 1971, pp65-57
  6. The ten games in which attendances are known averaged only 2,050 per contest
  7. Minor League Football, 1960-1985— Standings, Statistics, and Rosters", by Bob Gill, with Steven M. Brainerd and Tod Maher (McFarland & Company, 2002), p. 59
  8. Clemens, Gus (June 20, 1971). "Toros Get 20-19 Victory, Title". San Antonio Express.
  9. "Robstown Record Newspaper Archives; August 05, 1971 Page 4". 5 August 1971.
  10. Bob Gill, with Tod Maher. Outsiders II: Minor League And Independent Football, 1951-1985, p. vii. St. Johann Press, 2010. ISBN 1878282654
  11. Pence, Pat (June 16, 1973). "Pro grid debut for Albq tonight". Albuquerque Tribune.
  12. Today in SA history (July 19, 2016).
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