Oakland Invaders were a professional
American football team that played in the
United States Football
League (USFL) from 1983 through 1985.
History
In reaction to the Raiders relocating to Los Angeles
Oakland,
California
had been without a football team after the Oakland Raiders relocated to Los Angeles,
California
before the 1982 NFL season. The Invaders
stepped in to fill the void; the similar name was no accident. The
team had good fan support during the spring seasons of the USFL
(1983-1985).
1983 season
Lead by the league's 2nd ranked passer QB
Fred Besana, WR
Gordon
Banks, and ex-Raiders HB
Arthur
Whittington and TE
Raymond
Chester, the Invaders won the Pacific Conference with a 9-9
record. The Invaders gave a valiant effort in the opening round of
the playoffs, but were overrun by the eventual league champion
Michigan Panthers, 37-21 in front
of 60,237 rabid fans in the Pontiac Silverdome (The game was the
largest turnout for any USFL game in the 1983 season).
1984 season
The Invaders were picked by most to again challenge for a playoff
spot in 1984, but their powerful offense fell apart in the first
half of the season, scoring only 82 points. The team was unable to
run the ball and lost 9 straight to open the season. With the
emergence of RB
Eric Jordan, the
Invaders running attack rebounded and the team won 7 of its last 9
games. The defense was strong throughout the season finishing 7th
in points allowed.
1985 Season
The Michigan Panthers merged with the Invaders before the 1985
season in response to the league's plan to move to the fall. The
Invaders were the surviving team, and Taube took on Panthers owner
A. Alfred Taubman as a minority partner. The
new team, bolstered with Invader key players like Banks, went
13-4-1 in the regular season and was able to reach the 1985 USFL
championship game.
The Championship game was a rematch of sorts
with Chuck Fusina's Stars, who now
played in Baltimore
. During the game, a personal foul was called
on the Invaders that killed what might have been a game winning
drive, allowing the Stars to defeat Hebert's Invaders 28-24, and
claim indisputable bragging rights as the league's all-time best
team.
Despite reaching the championship game, massive financial losses
and weak attendance led the Invaders to announce they would suspend
operations for the 1986 season. As it turned out, the championship
game was the last USFL game ever played, as the league was
effectively killed by an antitrust suit against the NFL in which it
only won $3 in damages.
Past and future National Football League players
Some former
National Football
League players and some who would play for the NFL later on
were on this team. Among them were
Ray
Pinney of the 1970s
Pittsburgh
Steelers,
Cedrick Hardman of the
1970s
San Francisco 49ers and
early 1980s
Oakland Raiders,
Anthony Carter (
Minnesota Vikings,
Detroit Lions),
Arthur Whittington (
Oakland Raiders,
Buffalo Bills),
Bobby
Hebert (
New Orleans Saints,
Atlanta Falcons),
Gary Plummer (
San Diego Chargers,
San Francisco 49ers),
Raymond Chester (
Oakland Raiders,
Baltimore Colts),
Albert Bentley (
Indianapolis Colts,
Pittsburgh Steelers),
Dave Browning (
Oakland Raiders,
Los Angeles Raiders,
New England Patriots),
Ray Bentley (
Buffalo
Bills,
Cincinnati Bengals),
Dale Markham (
Oakland Raiders,
New York Giants,
Green Bay Packers) and
Derek Holloway (
Washington Redskins,
Tampa Bay Buccaneers).
Single season leaders
Rushing Yards: 1045 (1983),
Arthur
Whittington
Receiving Yards: 1323 (1985),
Anthony Carter
Passing Yards: 3980 (1983),
Fred
Besana
Season-by-season
|
| 1983 |
9 |
9 |
0 |
1st Pacific |
Lost Divisional (Michigan) |
|
| 1984 |
7 |
11 |
0 |
4th WC Pacific |
missed playoffs |
|
| 1985 |
13 |
4 |
1 |
1st WC |
Won Quarterfinal (Tampa
Bay)
Won Semifinal (Memphis)
Lost USFL Championship (Baltimore)
|
|
| Totals |
31 |
26 |
1 |
(including playoffs)
External links
- http://www.usfl.info/invaders
- http://www.remembertheusfl.8m.com/teams/oakland.html
|