The
American Football League (AFL) was a major
Professional Football league
that operated from 1960 until 1969, when it merged with the
established
National Football
League (NFL). The upstart AFL operated in direct competition
with the more established NFL throughout its existence. Though
downplayed by the NFL as inferior, the AFL signed half of the
NFL's first-round draft choices in
1960, including All-American
Billy
Cannon, perennial All-Star
Johnny Robinson, and Hall of Famer
Ron Mix. Overall, AFL teams signed 75% of
the NFL's draft choices that first year. It continued to attract
top talent from colleges and the NFL by the mid-1960s, well before
the
Common Draft which began in
1967.
In 1966,
a merger between the two
leagues was announced, but was not finalized until
1970. During its final two years of
existence, the AFL teams won upset victories over the NFL teams in
Super Bowl III and
IV, the former considered among one of the
biggest upsets in American sports history. When the merger took
place, all ten AFL franchises became part of the merged league's
new
American Football
Conference (AFC), with three teams from the original 16-team
NFL (the
Pittsburgh Steelers,
Cleveland Browns, and
Baltimore Colts) joining them. The
remaining 13 original NFL teams became the inaugural members of the
National Football
Conference (NFC). The AFL logo was incorporated into the newly
minted AFC logo, although the color of the "A" was changed from
blue and white, to red. The NFL retained its old name and logo and
claims the rights to all AFL products including the eagle
logo.
League history
The
National Football
League had grown to become one of the most popular professional
sports leagues in the United States. One franchise that did not
share in the success of the league was the
Chicago Cardinals, who were overshadowed
by the more popular
Chicago Bears.
The team
was reportedly for sale (with the intent of relocation), and one of
the men who approached the Cardinals was Lamar Hunt, son and heir of Texas
millionaire
oilman H. L. Hunt.
Hunt offered to buy
the Cardinals and move them to Dallas
, Texas
, where he
had grown up. While Hunt negotiated with Cardinals
ownership, similar offers were made by
Bud
Adams,
Bob Howsam, and
Max Winter.
When Hunt, Adams, and Howsam were each unable to secure a
controlling interest in the Chicago Cardinals, they approached NFL
commissioner
Bert Bell and proposed the
addition of
expansion teams. Bell,
wary of expanding the 12-team league and risking its newfound
success, rejected the offer. On his return flight to Dallas, Hunt
conceived the idea of an entirely new league and decided to contact
the others who had shown interest in purchasing the Cardinals. He
contacted Adams, Howsam, and Winter (as well as Winter's business
partner, Bill Boyer) to gauge their interest in starting a new
league. Hunt's first meeting with Adams was held in March 1959.
Hunt, who
felt a regional rivalry would be critical for the success of the
new league, convinced Adams to join and found his team in Houston
.
Hunt next
secured an agreement from Howsam to bring a team to Denver
, Colorado
.
After
Winter and Boyer agreed to start a team in Minneapolis-Saint Paul
, the new league had its first four teams.
Hunt also
approached Willard Rhodes of Seattle
, Washington
, but that effort failed when Rhodes was turned down
by Husky
Stadium
and had no place for his team to play.
Hunt also
sought franchises in Los Angeles
, California
and New York
City
. During the summer of 1959 he sought the
blessings of the NFL for his nascent league, as he did not seek a
potentially costly rivalry. Within weeks of the July 1959
announcement of the league's formation, Hunt received commitments
from
Barron Hilton and
Harry Wismer to bring teams to Los Angeles and
New York, respectively.
On August 14, 1959, the first league meeting was held in Chicago,
and charter memberships were given to Dallas, New York, Houston,
Denver, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis-Saint Paul. On August 22 the
league officially was named the American Football League. Although
Bell had given his public approval, individual NFL owners soon
began a campaign to undermine the new league. AFL owners were
approached with promises of new NFL franchises or ownership stakes
in existing ones. Only the party from Minneapolis accepted, and the
Minnesota group joined the NFL the next year, with the
Vikings. No actual AFL team ever existed
in Minnesota. The older league also announced on August 29 that it
had conveniently reversed its position against expansion, and
planned to bring NFL expansion teams to Houston and Dallas, to
start play in 1961.
Two more cities were awarded AFL franchises later in the year.
Ralph Wilson, who owned a minority
interest in the NFL's Detroit Lions,
announced he was placing a team in Buffalo
, New
York
after he had been rejected by Miami
. Buffalo was officially awarded a franchise
on October 28.
During a league meeting on November 22, a
10-man ownership group from Boston
, Massachusetts
(led by Billy Sullivan) was
awarded the AFL's eighth team. On November 30, 1959,
Joe Foss, a World
War II Marine
fighter ace and former governor of
South
Dakota
, was named the AFL's first commissioner.
Foss commissioned a friend of Harry Wismer's to develop the AFL's
eagle-on-football logo. Hunt was elected President of the AFL on
January 26, 1960.
The AFL Draft
The AFL's first
draft
took place the same day Boston was awarded its franchise, and
lasted 33 rounds. The league held a second draft on December 2,
which lasted for 20 rounds. Since the Raiders joined after the AFL
draft, they inherited Minnesota's selections (read next section). A
special
allocation draft
was held in January, 1960, to allow the Raiders to stock their
team, as some of the other AFL teams had already signed some of
Minneapolis' original draft choices.
Crisis and success (1960–61)
In November 1959, Minneapolis owner Max Winter announced his intent
to leave the AFL in order to accept a franchise offer from the NFL.
In 1961, his team began play in the NFL as the
Minnesota Vikings.
Los Angeles Chargers owner Barron Hilton
demanded that a replacement for Minnesota be placed in California,
in order to reduce his team's operating costs and to create a
rivalry.
After a brief search, Oakland
was chosen and an ownership group led by local real
estate developer Chet Soda was formed. After initially being
called the Oakland
"Señores", the
Oakland Raiders officially joined the AFL on
January 30, 1960.
The AFL's first major success came when the
Houston Oilers signed
Billy Cannon, the All-American and 1959
Heisman Trophy winner from
LSU. Cannon signed a $100,000 contract
to play for the Oilers, despite having already signed a $50,000
contract with the NFL's
Los Angeles
Rams. The Oilers filed suit and claimed that Rams general
manager
Pete Rozelle had unduly
manipulated Cannon. The court upheld the Houston contract, and with
Cannon the Oilers appeared in the AFL's first three championship
games (winning two).
On June 9, 1960, the league signed a five-year television contract
with
ABC, which
brought in revenues of approximately
$2,125,000 per year for the entire
league. On June 17, the AFL filed an antitrust lawsuit against the
NFL, which was dismissed in 1962 after a two-month trial. The AFL
began regular-season play (a night game on Friday, September 9,
1960) with eight teams in the league — the
Boston Patriots,
Buffalo Bills,
Dallas Texans,
Denver Broncos,
Houston Oilers,
Los Angeles Chargers,
New York Titans, and
Oakland Raiders. Raiders co-owner
Wayne Valley dubbed the AFL ownership "The
Foolish Club," a term Lamar Hunt subsequently used on team
photographs he sent as Christmas gifts.
The Oilers became the first-ever league champions by defeating the
Chargers, 24-16, in the AFL Championship on January 1, 1961.
Attendance for the 1960 season was respectable for a new league,
but not nearly that of the NFL. Whereas the more popular NFL teams
in 1960 regularly saw attendance figures in excess of 50,000 per
game, AFL attendance generally hovered between 10,000-20,000 per
game. With the low attendance came financial losses. The Raiders,
for instance, lost $500,000 in their first year and only survived
after receiving a $400,000 loan from Bills owner Ralph Wilson. In
an early sign of stability, however, the AFL did not lose any teams
after its first year of operation.
In fact, the only major change was the
relocation of the Chargers from Los Angeles to San
Diego
.
On August 8, 1961, the AFL, desperate to prove its legitimacy,
challenged the
Canadian
Football League to an exhibition game. It was decided that the
game would be between
Hamilton
Tiger-Cats and the
Buffalo Bills.
The Bills, who had finished near the bottom of the league in 1960,
and Ticats, one of the best teams in the CFL at the time, were
chosen because they were geographically close to one another (less
than 50 miles apart). It was thought that beating a CFL team would
prove that the AFL was at least the second-best football league in
North America. After all, the NFL had sent several teams against
teams from the CFL and had won every game so it was thought that
victory against the CFL would be easy.
Playing at Ivor Wynne
Stadium
in Hamilton
, Ontario
, the game proved to be a disaster for the AFL as
the Ticats defeated the Bills 38-21 playing a mix of AFL and CFL
rules. The Bills returned to Buffalo and it marked
the only time a pro football team from Canada
defeated a
pro football team from the United States. No team from a
U.S.-based football league has since competed with a team from a
Canada
-based league
(U.S./Canadian professional team matchups within one
league, however, have happened, such as the Toronto Rifles of the 1960s, the Montreal Machine of the early 1990s and the
CFL USA of the mid-1990s).
Movement and instability (1962–63)
While the Oilers found instant success in the AFL, other teams did
not fare as well. The Oakland Raiders and New York Titans struggled
on and off the field during their first few seasons in the league.
Oakland's eight-man ownership group was reduced to just three in
1961, after heavy financial losses their first season.
Attendance for home
games was poor, partly due to the team playing in the San
Francisco Bay Area
—which already had an established NFL team (the
San Francisco 49ers)—but the
product on the field was also to blame. After winning six
games their debut season, the Raiders won a total of three times in
the 1961 and 1962 seasons. Oakland took part in a 1961 supplemental
draft meant to boost the weaker teams in the league, but it did
little good. They participated in another such draft in 1962.
The Titans fared a little better on the field but had their own
financial troubles. Attendance was so low for home games that team
owner Harry Wismer had fans move to seats closer to the field to
give the illusion of a fuller stadium on television. Eventually
Wismer could no longer afford to meet his payroll, and on November
8, 1962 the AFL took over operations of the team. The Titans were
sold to a five-person ownership group headed by
Sonny Werblin on March 28, 1963, and in April
the new owners changed the team's name to the New York Jets.
The Raiders and Titans both finished last in their respective
divisions in the 1962 season. The Texans and Oilers, winners of
their divisions, faced each other for the 1962 AFL Championship on
December 23. The Texans dethroned the two-time champion Oilers,
20-17, in a double-
overtime
contest that was at the time professional football's longest-ever
game.
In 1963, the Texans became the second AFL team to relocate. Lamar
Hunt felt that despite winning the league championship in 1962, the
Texans could not succeed financially competing in the same market
as the
Dallas Cowboys, who had
entered the NFL as an expansion team in 1960.
After meetings with
New
Orleans
, Atlanta
and Miami
, Hunt
announced on May 22 that the Texans' new home would be Kansas
City
, Missouri
. Kansas City mayor
Harold Roe Bartle (nicknamed "Chief") was
instrumental in his city's success in attracting the team. Partly
to honor Bartle, the franchise officially became the Kansas City
Chiefs on May 26.
The San Diego Chargers, under head coach
Sid
Gillman, won a decisive 51-10 victory over the Boston Patriots
for the 1963 AFL Championship. Confident that his team was capable
of beating the NFL-champion
Chicago
Bears (he had the Chargers' rings inscribed with the phrase
"World Champions"), Gillman approached NFL Commissioner Pete
Rozelle and proposed a final championship game between the two
teams. Rozelle declined the offer; however, the game would be
instituted three seasons later.
Watershed years (1964–65)
A series of events throughout the next few years demonstrated the
AFL's ability to achieve a greater level of equality with the NFL.
On January 29, 1964 the AFL signed a lucrative US$ 36 million
television contract with
NBC (to start in the
1965 season), which gave the league money it needed to compete with
the NFL for talent.
A new single-game attendance record was set
on November 8, 1964 when 61,929 fans packed Shea Stadium
to watch the New York Jets and Buffalo
Bills.
The bidding war for players between the AFL and NFL escalated in
1965. The Chiefs drafted Kansas star
Gale
Sayers in the first round of the 1965 draft (held November 28,
1964), while the Chicago Bears did the same in the NFL draft.
Sayers eventually signed with the Bears. A similar situation
occurred when the New York Jets and the NFL's St. Louis Cardinals
both drafted University of Alabama quarterback
Joe Namath. In what was viewed as a key victory
for the AFL, Namath signed a $427,000 contract with the Jets on
January 2 (the deal also came with a new car). It was the highest
amount of money ever paid to a collegiate football player, and is
cited as a contributing factor to the eventual merger between the
two leagues.
In March 1965, Minneapolis lawyer
Joe
Robbie met with Commissioner Foss to inquire about an expansion
franchise.
On May 6, Robbie secured an agreement to
bring a team to Miami
, Florida
from city mayor Robert King High. League
expansion was approved at a meeting held on June 7, and on August
16 the AFL's ninth franchise was officially awarded to Robbie and
television star
Danny Thomas. The
Miami Dolphins joined the league for
a fee of $7.5 million, and started play in the AFL's Eastern
Division in 1966.
Escalation and merger (1966–67)
In 1966, the rivalry between the AFL and NFL reached an all-time
peak. On April 7, Joe Foss resigned as AFL Commissioner. His
successor was Oakland Raiders head coach and general manager
Al Davis, who had been instrumental in
turning around the fortunes of that franchise. No longer content
with trying to outbid the NFL for college talent, the AFL under
Davis actively started to recruit players already on NFL squads.
Davis's strategy focused on quarterbacks in particular, and in two
months he convinced seven NFL quarterbacks to sign with the AFL.
But while Davis intended to help the AFL win the bidding war, some
AFL and NFL owners saw the escalation as detrimental to both
leagues.
The same month Davis was named commissioner, several NFL owners,
with Dallas Cowboys general manager Tex Schramm, secretly
approached Lamar Hunt and other AFL owners, and asked the AFL to
merge. They held a series of secret meetings in Dallas to discuss
their concerns over rapidly increasing player salaries, as well as
the practice of player poaching. Hunt and Schramm completed the
basic groundwork for a merger of the two leagues by the end of May,
and on June 8, 1966 the merger was officially announced. Under the
terms of the agreement, the two leagues would hold a common player
draft. The agreement also called for a title game to be played
between the champions of the respective leagues. The two leagues
would be fully merged by 1970, and NFL commissioner
Pete Rozelle would remain as commissioner of
the merged league. The AFL also agreed to pay indemnities of $18
million to the NFL over 20 years. In protest, Davis resigned as AFL
commissioner on July 25 rather than remain until the completion of
the merger, and
Milt Woodard was named
President of the AFL.
On January 15, 1967, the first-ever World Championship Game between
the champions of the two separate professional football leagues,
the AFL-NFL Championship Game (retroactively referred to as
Super Bowl I), was played in Los
Angeles. After a close first half, the NFL champion
Green Bay Packers overwhelmed the AFL
champion Kansas City Chiefs, 35-10. The loss reinforced for many
the notion that the AFL was indeed the inferior league. Packers
head coach
Vince Lombardi stated
after the game, "I do not think they are as good as the top teams
in the National Football League."
The second AFL-NFL Championship (
Super
Bowl II) yielded a similar result. The Oakland Raiders—who
easily beat the Houston Oilers to win their first AFL
championship—were overmatched by the Packers, 33-14. The more
experienced Packers capitalized on a number of Raiders miscues, and
never trailed. Green Bay defensive tackle
Henry Jordan offered a compliment to Oakland
and the AFL, when he said, "...the AFL is becoming much more
sophisticated on offense. I think the league has always had good
personnel, but the blocks were subtler and better conceived in this
game."
The AFL
added its tenth and final team on May 24, 1967, when they awarded
the league's second expansion franchise to an ownership group from
Cincinnati
, Ohio
headed by
NFL legend Paul Brown. Although
Brown had intended to join the NFL, he agreed to join the AFL when
he learned that his team would join the NFL once the merger was
completed. The
Cincinnati Bengals
began play in the 1968 season, and finished last in the Western
Division.
Legitimacy and the end of an era (1968-70)
While many AFL players and observers felt their league was the
equal of the NFL, the first two Super Bowls did little to prove it.
That perception changed on January 12, 1969, when the AFL Champion
New York Jets shocked the heavily favored NFL Champion
Baltimore Colts in
Super Bowl III. The Colts, who entered the
contest favored by as many as 18 points, had completed the
1968 NFL season with a 13-1 record, and won
the NFL title with a convincing 34-0 dismantling of the Cleveland
Browns. Led by their stalwart defense—which allowed a record-low
144 points—the 1968 Colts were considered one of the best-ever NFL
teams.
By contrast, the Jets allowed 280 points, the highest total for any
division winner in the two leagues. They had also narrowly beaten
the favored Oakland Raiders in the AFL Championship. Jets
quarterback
Joe Namath recalled that in
the days leading up to the game, he grew increasingly angry when
told New York had no chance to beat Baltimore. Three days before
the game, a frustrated Namath responded to a
heckler at the Touchdown Club in Miami by declaring,
"We're going to win Sunday, I'll guarantee you."
Namath and the Jets made good on his guarantee as they held the
Colts scoreless until late in the fourth quarter. The Jets won,
16-7, in what is considered one of the greatest upsets in American
sports history. With the win, the AFL finally achieved parity with
the NFL and legitimized the merger of the two leagues. That notion
was reinforced one year later in
Super
Bowl IV, when the AFL champion Kansas City Chiefs upset the NFL
champion
Minnesota Vikings, 23-7,
in the last championship game to be played between the two leagues.
The Vikings, favored by 12½ points, were held to just 67 rushing
yards.
The last
game in AFL history was the AFL
All-Star Game, held in Houston's Astrodome
on January 17, 1970. The Western All-Stars,
led by Chargers quarterback
John Hadl,
defeated the Eastern All-Stars, 26-3. Hadl was named the game's
Most Valuable Player. Prior to
the start of the
1970 NFL season,
the merged league was split into two conferences of three divisions
each. All ten AFL teams made up the bulk of the new
American Football Conference.
To avoid having 16 teams in one conference and 10 in the other, the
leagues voted to move three NFL teams to the AFC. Motivated by the
prospect of an
intrastate
rivalry with the Bengals as well as his personal animosity with
Paul Brown, Cleveland Browns owner
Art Modell quickly offered to include his
team in the AFC.
He helped convince the Pittsburgh Steelers (the Browns' archrivals) and
Baltimore Colts (who already shared the Baltimore
/Washington, D.C.
market with the Washington Redskins prior to the merger)
to follow suit, and each team received US $3 million to
switch. All the other NFL squads became part of the
National Football
Conference.
Pro Football
Hall of Fame
receiver Charlie
Joiner, who started his career with the Houston Oilers (1969), was the last AFL player active in
Professional Football, retiring after the 1986 season, when he
played for the San Diego
Chargers.
Legacy
The AFL stands as the only professional football league to
successfully compete against the NFL. When the two leagues merged
in 1970, all ten AFL franchises and their statistics became part of
the new NFL. Every other professional league that competed against
the NFL: the three previous leagues named "American Football
League"; the
AAFC;
the
USFL; the
WFL; and the
XFL
folded completely. From an earlier AFL (1936-1937), only the
Cleveland Rams, and from the
AAFC, Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers joined
the NFL and are currently operating (a third AAFC team, the
Baltimore Colts, is not
related to the current Indianapolis Colts franchise: the original
Colts played only one year in the NFL before disbanding at the end
of the 1950 season).
The NFL adopted many ideas introduced by the AFL, including names
on player jerseys and revenue sharing of gate and television
receipts. The older league also adopted the practice of using the
stadium scoreboard clocks to keep track of the official game time,
instead of just having a
stopwatch used by
the referee. The AFL played a 14-game schedule for its entire
existence, starting in 1960. The NFL, which had played a 12-game
schedule since 1947, changed to a 14-game schedule in 1961, a year
after the American Football League instituted it. The AFL also
introduced the
two-point
conversion to professional football thirty-four years before
the NFL instituted it in 1994 (college football had adopted the two
point conversion in the late 1950s). All of these innovations
pioneered by the AFL, including its more exciting style of play and
colorful uniforms, have essentially made today's pro football more
like the
AFL than like the old-line NFL. The AFL's
challenge to the NFL also laid the groundwork for the
Super Bowl, which has become the standard for
championship contests in the United States.
Hunt's
vision not only brought a new professional football league to
California
and New York
, but introduced the sport to Colorado
, restored it to Texas
and later to
fast-growing Florida
, as well as bringing it to New England
for the first time in 12 years. Buffalo,
having lost its
original NFL franchise
in 1929 and turned down by the NFL at least twice (1940 and
1950) for a replacement,
returned to the NFL with the merger. In addition, the AFL also
adopted the first-ever cooperative television plan for professional
football, in which the league office negotiated an ABC-TV contract,
the proceeds of which were divided equally among member
clubs.
Three NFL franchises were awarded as a direct result of the AFL's
competition with the older league: the Vikings, who were awarded to
Max Winter in exchange for dropping his bid to join the AFL; the
Falcons, whose franchise went to Rankin Smith to dissuade him from
purchasing the AFL's
Miami Dolphins;
and the Saints, because of successful anti-trust legislation which
let the two leagues merge, and was supported by several Louisiana
politicians. Further, the success of the expansion process
engendered by the AFL-NFL conflict (as well as later expansion
pressures created by the WFL, USFL, and even the
CFL) certainly led to more expansion, ultimately to
the thirty-two team league as it exists in 2009. Had it not been
for the existence of the Oilers from 1960 to 1996, the
Houston Texans also would likely not exist
today. Thus, if not for the AFL, at least five of today's NFL teams
would likely never have existed.
The AFL also spawned coaches whose style and techniques profoundly
affect the play of professional football until this day. In
addition to AFL greats like
Hank Stram,
Lou Saban,
Sid
Gillman and
Al Davis were eventual hall
of fame coaches such as
Bill Walsh, a protegé
of Davis with the AFL
Oakland
Raiders; and
Chuck Noll, who worked
for Gillman and the AFL
LA/San Diego
Chargers from 1960 through 1965. Others include
Buddy Ryan (AFL's
New
York Jets) and
John
Madden (AFL's
Oakland Raiders).
Additionally, many prominent coaches began their pro football
careers as players in the AFL, including
Sam
Wyche (
Cincinnati Bengals),
Marty Schottenheimer (
Buffalo Bills), and two-time Super Bowl winner
Tom Flores (
Oakland Raiders). Flores also has a Super
Bowl ring as a player (
1969 Kansas City Chiefs).
Perhaps the greatest social legacy of the AFL was the
domino effect of its policy of opportunity for
black players, which not only led to the explosion of black talent
on the field, but the eventual entry of blacks into scouting,
coordinator, and ultimately head coaching positions, long after the
league ceased to exist.
The AFL's free agents came from several sources. Some were players
who could not find success playing in the NFL, while another source
was the
Canadian Football
League. In the late 1950s, many players released by the NFL, or
un-drafted and unsigned out of college by the NFL, went North to
try their luck with the CFL, and later returned to the states to
play in the AFL.
In the league's first years, men like the Oilers'
George Blanda, the Chargers/Bills'
Jack Kemp, the Texans'
Len
Dawson, the Titans'
Don Maynard, the
Raiders/Patriots/Jets'
Babe Parilli,
the Pats'
Bob Dee proved to be AFL
standouts. Other players such as the Broncos'
Frank Tripucka, the Pats'
Gino Cappelletti, the Bills'
Cookie Gilchrist and the Chargers'
Tobin Rote,
Sam DeLuca
and
Dave Kocourek also made their mark
to give the fledgling league badly-needed credibility. Rounding out
this mix of potential talent were the true "free agents", the
walk-ons and the "wanna-be's", who tried out in droves for the
chance to play professional football.
The American Football League took advantage of the burgeoning
popularity of football by locating teams in major cities that
lacked NFL franchises, and by using the growing power of televised
football games (bolstered with the help of major network contracts,
first with
ABC and
later with
NBC). It featured many outstanding
games, such as the classic 1962 double-overtime American Football
League championship game between the
Dallas Texans and the defending champion
Houston Oilers. At the time it was
the longest
professional
football championship game ever played.
The AFL appealed to fans by offering a flashier style of play,
compared to the more conservative game of the NFL. Long passes
("bombs") were commonplace in AFL offenses, led by such talented
quarterbacks as
John Hadl,
Daryle Lamonica and
Len Dawson.
After the AFL-NFL merger agreement in 1966, and after the AFL's
Jets defeated the "best team in the
history of the NFL", the Colts, a popular misconception fostered by
the NFL and spread by media reports was that the AFL defeated the
NFL because of the
Common Draft
instituted from 1967 on. This apparently was meant to confirm that
until the AFL did not have to compete with the NFL in the draft, it
could not achieve parity. But the 1968 Jets had less than a handful
of "Common Draftees". Their stars were honed in the AFL, many of
them since the Titans days. As noted below, the AFL got its share
of stars long before the "Common Draft".
Players who chose the AFL to develop their talent included
Lance Alworth and
Ron
Mix of the
Chargers, who had
also been drafted by the NFL's
San
Francisco 49ers and
Baltimore Colts
respectively.
Both eventually were elected to the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
after earning recognition during their careers as
being among the best at their positions. Among specific
teams, the 1964
Buffalo Bills stood
out by holding their opponents to a pro football record 913 yards
rushing on 300 attempts, while also recording fifty quarterback
sacks in a fourteen-game schedule.
Another
example is cited by the University of Kansas
website, which describes the 1961 Bluebonnet Bowl, won by KU, and goes on to
say "Two Kansas players, quarterback John
Hadl and fullback Curtis
McClinton, signed professional contracts on the field
immediately after the conclusion of the game. Hadl
inked a deal with the [AFL]
San Diego Chargers, and McClinton went to
the [AFL]
Dallas
Texans." Between them, in their careers Hadl and McClinton
combined for an
American Football
League Rookie of the Year award, seven
AFL All-Star
selections, two Pro Bowl selections, a team MVP award, two
AFL All-Star Game
MVP awards, two
AFL
championships, and a
World
Championship. And these were players selected by the AFL long
before the "Common Draft".
Despite having a national television contract, the AFL often found
itself trying to gain a foothold, only to come up against
roadblocks. For example, CBS-TV, which broadcast NFL games, ignored
and did not report scores from the innovative AFL, on orders from
the NFL. After the merger agreement was announced, CBS began to
give AFL scores.
In 2009, a five-part series,
Full Color Football: The History of the American Football
League on the
Showtime
Network refuted many of the long-held misconceptions about the
AFL, and exposed some warts on the NFL facade. In it,
Abner Haynes tells of how his father forbade
him to accept being drafted by the NFL, after drunken scouts from
that league had visited the Haynes home; the NFL Cowboys' Tex
Schramm is quoted as saying that if his team had ever agreed to
play the AFL's
Dallas Texans,
they would very likely have lost;
George
Blanda makes a case for more AFL players being inducted to the
Pro Football Hall of Fame by pointing out that Hall of Famer
Willie Brown was
cut by the
Houston Oilers because he
couldn't cover Oilers flanker
Charlie
Hennigan in practice. Later, when Brown was with the Broncos,
Hennigan needed nine catches in one game against the Broncos to
break
Lionel Taylor's Professional
Football record of 100 catches in one season. Hennigan caught the
nine passes and broke the record, even though he was covered by
Brown: Blanda's point being that if Hennigan could do so well
against a Hall of Fame db, he deserves induction, as well.
In all, the series goes far to show that the AFL was "major league"
in its drafts, its coaching, its play, and the quality of its
participants, and deserves accolades as the genesis of modern
Professional Football.
Influence on Professional Football Coaching
Many coaches who eventually shaped modern Professional Football had
roots in the American Football League.
Bill Walsh is often
cited for an impressive "coaching tree" of assistants who went on
to become head coaches. But Walsh was an assistant to the
Oakland Raiders'
Al
Davis, who learned the trade from the AFL
Chargers' mastermind,
Sid Gillman. Walsh's
coaching tree is thus an offshoot of
Gillman's coaching tree. Besides Davis, others who coached
for Gillman included
Dick Vermeil,
Chuck Knox, and
George Allen, as well as
Chuck Noll, the only head coach to win four Super
Bowls. The numbers on Gillman's coaching tree indicate the Super
Bowls won by his coaching "descendants", a total of twenty. As an
update to the tree, Jim Mora Jr. is Mike Holmgren's most recent
assistant to become a head coach.

AFL 50th Anniversary Celebration

AFL 50th Anniversary Logo
As the influence of the AFL continues through the present, the 50th
anniversary of its launch will be celebrated during
2009.
The season-long celebration began in August
with the 2009 Pro
Football Hall of Fame Game in Canton, Ohio
between two AFC teams (as opposed to the AFC-vs-NFC
format the game first adopted in 1971). The opponents were
two of the original AFL franchises, the
Buffalo Bills and
Tennessee Titans (the former
Houston Oilers). Bills' owner
Ralph C. Wilson Jr. (a 2009 Hall of Fame
inductee) and Titans' owner
Bud Adams are
the only surviving members of the
Foolish
Club, the eight original owners of AFL franchises. For the
game, the Bills, Titans, and on-field officials wore throwback
uniforms from the AFL years.
During the regular season, all of the "original eight" AFL teams
will take part in at least two "Legacy Weekends," during which the
teams and on-field officials will wear AFL throwback attire.
In the fall of 2009, the
Showtime pay-cable
network premiered
Full Color Football: The History of the American Football
League, a 5-part documentary series produced by
NFL Films that features vintage game film and
interviews as well as more recent interviews with those associated
with the AFL.
AFL franchises
| Division |
Team |
First Season |
Home Stadium |
AFL Record (W-L-T) |
AFL Titles |
| Eastern |
Boston Patriots |
1960 |
Nickerson Field (1960–62), Fenway Park (1963–68), Alumni Stadium (1969) |
64-69-9 |
0 |
| Buffalo Bills |
1960 |
War Memorial Stadium (1960-1969) |
67-71-6 |
2 |
| Houston Oilers |
1960 |
Jeppesen Stadium (1960–64), Rice Stadium (1965–67), Houston Astrodome (1968–69) |
72-69-4 |
2 |
| Miami Dolphins |
1966 |
Miami Orange Bowl |
15-39-2 |
0 |
| New York Titans/Jets |
1960 |
Polo Grounds (1960–63), Shea Stadium (1964–69) |
71-67-6 |
1 |
| Western |
Cincinnati Bengals |
1968 |
Nippert Stadium (1968-1969) |
7-20-1 |
0 |
| Dallas Texans/Kansas City
Chiefs |
1960 |
Cotton Bowl (1960–62), Municipal
Stadium (1963–69) |
92-50-5 |
3 |
| Denver Broncos |
1960 |
Bears Stadium/Mile High
Stadium (1960–69) |
39-97-4 |
0 |
| Los Angeles/San Diego
Chargers |
1960 |
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (1960), Balboa
Stadium (1961–66), San Diego Stadium (1967–69) |
88-51-6 |
1 |
| Oakland Raiders |
1960 |
Kezar Stadium (1960), Candlestick
Park (1961), Frank Youell
Field (1962–65), Oakland-Alameda County
Coliseum (1966–69) |
80-61-5 |
1 |
|
AFL playoffs
From 1960 to 1968, the AFL determined its champion via a
single-elimination playoff game between the winners of its two
divisions.The home teams alternated each year by division, so in
1968 the Jets hosted the Raiders, even though Oakland had a better
record (this was changed in 1969). In 1963, the Buffalo Bills and
Boston Patriots finished tied with identical records of 7-6-1 in
the AFL East Division. There was no tie-breaker protocol in place,
so a one game playoff was held in War Memorial Stadium in December.
The visiting Patriots defeated the host Bills 26-8. The Patriots
traveled to San Diego as the Chargers completed a three game season
sweep over the weary Patriots with a 51-10 victory. A similar
situation occurred in the 1968 season, when the Oakland Raiders and
the Kansas City Chiefs finished the regular season tied with
identical records of 12-2 in the AFL West Division. The Raiders
beat the Chiefs 41-6 in a division playoff to qualify for the AFL
Championship Game. In 1969, the final year of the independent AFL,
Professional Football's first "
wild
card" playoffs were conducted. A four-team playoff was held,
with the second-place teams in each division playing the winner of
the other division. The Chiefs upset the Raiders in Oakland 17-7 in
the league's Championship, the final AFL game played. The Kansas
City Chiefs were the first Super Bowl champion to win two road
playoff games and the first wildcard team to win the Super Bowl,
although the term "wildcard" was coined by the media, and not used
officially until several years later.
AFL Championship Games
| Eastern Division |
Western Division |
| Season |
Date |
Winning Team |
Score |
Losing Team |
Venue |
Attendance |
| 1960 |
January 1, 1961 |
Houston
Oilers |
24–16 |
Los Angeles
Chargers |
Jeppesen Stadium |
32,183 |
| 1961 |
December 24, 1961 |
Houston
Oilers (2) |
10–3 |
San Diego
Chargers |
Balboa Stadium |
29,556 |
| 1962 |
December 23, 1962 |
Dallas
Texans |
20–17 (2OT) |
Houston
Oilers |
Jeppesen Stadium (2) |
37,981 |
| 1963 |
January 5, 1964 |
San Diego
Chargers |
51–10 |
Boston
Patriots |
Balboa Stadium (2) |
30,127 |
| 1964 |
December 26, 1964 |
Buffalo
Bills |
20–7 |
San Diego
Chargers |
War Memorial Stadium |
40,242 |
| 1965 |
December 26, 1965 |
Buffalo Bills
(2) |
23–0 |
San Diego
Chargers |
Balboa Stadium (3) |
30,361 |
| 1966 |
January 1, 1967 |
Kansas City
Chiefs (2) |
31–7 |
Buffalo
Bills |
War Memorial Stadium
(2) |
42,080 |
| 1967 |
December 31, 1967 |
Oakland
Raiders |
40–7 |
Houston
Oilers |
Oakland-Alameda County
Coliseum |
53,330 |
| 1968 |
December 29, 1968 |
New York
Jets |
27–23 |
Oakland
Raiders |
Shea Stadium |
62,627 |
| 1969 |
January 4, 1970 |
Kansas City
Chiefs (3) |
17–7 |
Oakland
Raiders |
Oakland-Alameda County
Coliseum (2) |
53,561 |
|
Italics – Super Bowl Appearance
AFL All-Star games
The AFL did not play an All-Star game after its first season in
1960, but did stage All-Star games for the 1961 through 1969
seasons. All-Star teams from the Eastern and Western divisions
played each other after every season except 1965. That season, the
league champion Buffalo Bills played all-stars from the other
teams.
After the
1964 season, the AFL All-Star game had been scheduled for early
1965 in New
Orleans
' Tulane Stadium. After numerous black
players were refused service by a number of area hotels and
businesses, black and white players alike called for a
boycott.
Led by Bills players such as Cookie Gilchrist, the players successfully
lobbied to have the game moved to Houston's Jeppesen
Stadium
.
All-Time AFL Team
As chosen by 1969 AFL Hall of Fame Selection Committee
Members:
AFL records
The following is a sample of some records set during the existence
of the league. The NFL considers AFL statistics and records
equivalent to its own.
- Yards passing, game - 464, George
Blanda (Oilers, October 29, 1961)
- Yards passing, season - 4,007, Joe
Namath (Jets, 1967)
- Yards passing, career - 21,130, Jack
Kemp (Chargers, Bills)
- Yards rushing, game - 243, Cookie
Gilchrist (Bills, December 8, 1963)
- Yards rushing, season - 1,458, Jim
Nance (Patriots, 1966)
- Yards rushing, career - 5,101, Clem
Daniels (Texans, Raiders)
- Receptions, season - 101, Charlie
Hennigan (Oilers, 1964)
- Receptions, career - 567, Lionel
Taylor (Broncos)
- Points scored, season - 155, Gino
Cappelletti (Patriots, 1964)
- Points scored, career - 1,100, Gino
Cappelletti (Patriots)
Players, coaches, and contributors
Commissioners/Presidents of the American Football League
- Joe Foss, commissioner (November
1959–April 1966)
- Al Davis, commissioner (April 1966–July
1966)
- Milt Woodard, president (July
1966–March 1970)
See also
Footnotes
- Gruver, The American Football League, p. 9.
- Gruver, The American Football League, p. 13.
- Gruver, The American Football League, pp. 13–14.
- Gruver, The American Football League, p. 14.
- Gruver, The American Football League, pp. 15–16.
- Miller, Going Long, pp. 3–4.
- Gruver, The American Football League, pp. 22–23.
- Maiorana, Relentless, p. 65.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, pp. 7–8.
- Dickey, pp. 38–39.
- Brown, PB - The Paul Brown Story
- Shamsky, The Magnificent Seasons, p. 5.
- Foreword by Miller Farr.
- Includes postseason games.
- 2001 National Football League Record and Fact Book, p. 405,
Edited by Randal Liu and Matt Marini, Workman Publishing Company,
New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2
References
- History: The AFL - Pro Football Hall of Fame ( link).
Further reading
- Jack Horrigan and Mike Rathet,
The Other League/The Fabulous Story of the American Football
League
- Jack Orr, We Came of Age/A Picture
History of the American Football League
- George Sullivan,
Touchdown!/The Picture History of the American Football
League
- Sal Maiorana, If You Can't Join 'Em, Beat 'Em: A
Remembrance of the American Football League, ISBN
1-4107-4942-8
External links