New USFL season at hand

Daryl Johnston has been on both ends of the spectrum when it comes to startup football leagues.

In 2019, he served as general manager of the Alliance of American Football’s San Antonio Commanders, and watched the circuit implode before completing its first and only season – leaving behind bad debts and bad feelings.

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Now the former Dallas Cowboys fullback is president of football operations for the United States Football League. And after meeting all its financial obligations in Year One and garnering solid television ratings, the USFL has returned.

Johnston likes where it’s headed.

“We hosted the Birmingham Stallions (on Monday at Protective Stadium) and passed out their championship rings,” Johnston said during a Tuesday morning press conference. “And it was really kind of a full circle moment for us because the room we hosted the event in was actually the room we did our inaugural draft back in February of 2022.

“We’re just really, really excited to kick off the season here in Year Two and bring high quality football to the fans of the USFL, and I cannot wait until we are crowning our Year Two champion next season as we get ready for season three. But there’s a lot of work to do before we get to that point.”

After Birmingham served as the hub for all eight teams in 2022, the league will have four sites this spring. Birmingham will be home to the Stallions and New Orleans Breakers; Memphis hosts the Showboats and Houston Gamblers; the Michigan Panthers will play in Detroit, along with the Philadelphia Stars; and the New Jersey Generals and Pittsburgh Maulers will call Canton home for 2023.

“We’ve actually moved out into four hubs throughout our league, and that was in response to a lot of the feedback we had from our fan base,” Johnston explained. “You know, one of the things they wanted to do was to see those full stadiums when the home teams were playing, and it was really hard for us to accomplish that with Birmingham basically having a home game every weekend. And our other teams, when they played, really didn’t have that same support.

“So, one of the things we wanted to do was start to get our teams into their home markets – or as close to their home markets as we can – and give them that opportunity that Birmingham had last season.”

The Memphis Showboats replace the Tampa Bay Bandits for the 2023 campaign, and have the honor of hosting the first USFL regular season game outside Birmingham.

The Showboats kick off the new season at 3:30 p.m. CDT on Saturday when they welcome the Philadelphia Stars to Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium.

Todd Haley, who guided the Bandits to a 4-6 record in 2022, is helming the Showboats.

“Daryl called me this summer and he said, ‘How would you feel about coaching the Memphis Showboats?” and I said it sounds great. And then he added, ‘You’re going to be in Memphis,” and that got me really excited,” Haley said. “I came down here for the opening press conference, got to see a little bit of Memphis. I’ve been in and out a few times, but really excited about everything that I’ve seen here.

“I mean, our facility here at Simmons Bank Liberty stadium is phenomenal. The locker room that we’re able to utilize is phenomenal. That gets the players excited. You know, just a first-class setup, and I think it’s only gonna get better.”

USFL head of officiating Mike Pereira was also on hand for the presser and gave updates on a few rule changes and tweaks in store for this spring and summer.

“We are always concerned about the pace of play, and the overall length of the game,” Pereira said. “And about Week Three last year, we had games that were lasting longer than three hours. So, we put in a rule that said that we would wind the clock after incomplete passes in the first and third quarters. It still really didn’t get the overall time of the game down to where we wanted it to, or where we wanted it to be. Therefore, this year, we’re expanding that winding after incomplete passes into the second and fourth quarters also, up until the five-minute mark of each one of those quarters, then the clock will remain stopped after the incomplete passes.

“We’re shooting for a game that falls into a window of around two hours and 45 minutes, maybe two hours and 55 minutes.”

Perhaps the biggest change – and best news for league offenses – is an alteration of the forward fumble rule.

“We did change a rule that got discussed every year when I was at the competition committee, and I was against changing it, but I got beat down a little bit,” Pereira said. “The rule has always been that when you fumble the ball forward and out of bounds in the field of play, the ball goes back to the spot of the fumble and the fumbling team keeps the ball. But the rule has been if you fumbled it forward into the end zone or into the pylon and out of bounds of the end zone, then it turned into a touchback and everybody – I mean I think every fan – felt that the rule was unfair. And so, we changed it. We’re treating all forward fumbles that go out of bounds the same even if it’s in the end zone. The ball goes back to the fumbling team at the spot of the fumble.”

Teams will also carry three quarterbacks this year. The third will remain inactive unless the first two quarterbacks are knocked out of the game. And kickoffs have been moved back to the 20-yard line to ensure even more runbacks.

Rules notwithstanding, the goal of the league is to provide quality entertainment for fans while giving players another chance to make the leap to the NFL. “Guys in this league have seen some guys extend their dream and make it into the NFL, and we embrace that as coaches and as the USFL,” Haley said. “So, we’re rooting for those kinds of things to happen. And when they see guys make it and stick on an NFL team and have success, that just builds the excitement even more because there’s just not enough spots in the NFL for all the talented players we have out there that love this game of football.”  

Another great G League season

The NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament was one for the ages.

The NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament was also fantastic.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Spoutable @ScottAdamson, Post @scottscribe, Mastodon @SLA1960 and Twitter @adamsonsl

Next weekend the NBA playoffs begin (following the play-in games), which is always a fun time for me. And while the Association’s championship tourney is just heating up in mid-May the WNBA begins anew, highlighting a league that gets better and stronger every year.

After something of a hiatus, roundball had returned to the top of the heap among my sports passions, so – as you might have guessed – I’m in the midst of a love fest.

But while sharing the warmth, I’ve gotta blow some kisses the NBA G League’s way.

After a great regular season its postseason has been pretty darn fun, too, with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers and Delaware Blue Coats reaching the championship series.

Delaware – 20-12 in the regular season but losers of four consecutive games entering the playoffs – swept its way to the 2022-23 title. The Blue Coats opened with a 134-120 victory over RGV on Tuesday, getting 43 points from Jaden Springer and 35 more courtesy of NBA Slam Dunk Contest champion and a two-way player, Mac McClung.

In Game 2 on Thursday, McClung led the charge with 30 points in a 114-110 conquest, clinching the first title in franchise history.

Unlike the format used by the parent league, the G League playoffs are quick and dramatic. And when I say quick, I mean there are no second chances until you reach the Finals.

Twelve teams qualify for the playoffs – six from the Eastern Conference and six from the Western Conference, with the top two seeds from each earning first round byes.

This year, the Long Island Nets took top honors in the East with a 23-9 record, while the Stockton Kings were kings of the West at 25-7.

That was good enough for first-round passes, along with the conference’s second seeds, the Blue Coats (Eastern) and Memphis Hustle (Western).

But while the NBA playoffs are a best-of-seven format, that’s not the case in the G League. It’s a one-and-done affair right up until the championship series, which is best-of-three.

Rio Grande Valley – defending league champions – made it into the playoffs as a No. 6 seed in the West. Even though they had the same record (18-14) as the Santa Cruz Warriors and Mexico City Capitanes, they squeezed their way into the field via tiebreakers.

The Vipers opened with a wildly entertaining 124-122 victory over the South Bay Lakers, one that saw them go on a 5-0 run to tie the road game at 122-all and win it on Jalen Lecque’s bucket with 0.2 seconds remaining.

TyTy Washington Jr., on assignment from the parent club Houston Rockets, led the way with 30 points while two-way players Darius Days and Trevor Hudgins combined for 41 points.

They had to dig deep again for their second win in the playoffs, a 110-108 victory over Memphis. This time Washington Jr. hit a pair of free throws with five seconds left and the Hustle missed a 3-pointer in the waning moments to seal the deal.

RGV won their semifinal meeting with the Sioux Falls Skyforce, 110-105, taking an 86-85 lead in the fourth quarter and never trailing again.

The Blue Coats – affiliates of the Philadelphia 76ers – got to rest in the first round and then started their run to the finals with a 104-99 conquest of Capital City. Springer sparked the win with 24 points and McClung pumped in 20.

They were even more impressive in upsetting the Nets, 109-94.

Springer had 21 points and 16 rebounds in a contest that saw Delaware lead at every break.

I’ve made no secret about my affection for the G League, which has only grown now that I have a hometown team in the Birmingham Squadron. From the one free-throw rule to coach’s challenges to target score overtimes, it’s terrific, innovative professional basketball.

And while I’m perfectly happy with the NBA’s postseason structure, the “win or go home” aspect of its feeder league works just fine. The G League starts with a preseason tournament (the Showcase Cup) before hitting the reset button for a 32-game regular season slate, so a no-frills playoff makes perfect sense.

The only bad thing about it is that it leaves me wanting more – which is the highest compliment I can pay to a developmental league.

Stallions, Breakers in high spirits

They celebrated big hits.

They celebrated big plays.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Spoutable @ScottAdamson, Post @scottscribe, Mastodon @SLA1960 and Twitter @adamsonsl

And when a teammate found his way into the end zone, they celebrated in big numbers.

Thing is, it was all just a scrimmage.

But football is a game, games are supposed to be fun, and two United States Football League rivals got to mix pleasure with business on Friday before things get serious.

The Birmingham Stallions and New Orleans Breakers locked horns today at Legion Field, putting in one last dress rehearsal ahead of the 2023 USFL regular season opener on April 15.

The Stallions will host the New Jersey Generals that night at Protective Stadium, while the Breakers – calling the Magic City home for the second consecutive year – will face the Pittsburgh Maulers at the same venue on April 16.

If the teams can match the enthusiasm they mustered at the Old Gray Lady next weekend, it should be two days of high energy football.

“We see each other in the hotel so there was some good-natured trash talk, and it was great,” said first-year New Orleans coach John DeFilippo, who served as Chicago Bears QB coach and passing game coordinator in 2021. “And our guys are so spirited. The best part about it was I saw very few injuries, if any at all. There’s a difference between doing things right in practice and doing the right thing in a game, so this was really important.

“There are a lot of different situations out there, and you’ve got to process it.”

Stallions quarterbacks J’Mar Smith, Alex McGough and Jalen Morton shuffled in and out throughout the scrimmage, which Birmingham boss Skip Holtz said was by design.

“Today, I rolled out every quarterback … I just want to see ‘em all play and see where we are,” Holtz said. “Next week, we’ll start putting it together.”

Like his counterpart, the Stallions coach was happy to close out preseason camp with a game-style workout.

“It’s been a long camp, so to be able to finish it with a little scrimmage like this against another team was great,” Holtz said. “Everybody’s starting to hit each other and ready to start playing games, and I thought both teams handled it really well.

“Tempers didn’t flare or anything like that. We got some work done, so I thought it was a really productive day for both sides, but excited to be back for season two. Excited to put this team together.”

Smith said with the scrimmage behind them, players will soon adopt a game week mindset.  

“The pieces are out there, we’ve just got to put the puzzle together,” he said. “We got one week of work left to get ready for New Jersey. Camp is over … we can finally say that, but now it’s time to get that 1-and-oh mentality and get ready for the season.”

McLeod Bethel-Thompson, fresh from helping the Toronto Argonauts win the 2022 Grey Cup, hopes to lead the charge for the Breakers in 2023.

The 34-year-old signal caller showed plenty of zip on his fastball today.

“We’ve been learning the same thing all camp,” he said. “It’s about us … we have to execute better and do the small things. We know we have the talent, but we have to do the basics and be fundamentally sound. And I have to cut down on my mistakes.”

The Stallions topped the USFL South Division last season with a 9-1 record, then won two playoff games (the first coming against the Breakers) to claim the inaugural league championship.

New Orleans, under the direction of Larry Fedora, finished second to Birmingham in the division with a 6-4 regular season mark.

Now all eight teams in the circuit hit the reset button for Year 2.

“We’ve got a lot of new faces on our football team this year, but I like the progress we’re making,” Holtz said. “We’re still not there … we’re not as consistent as we need to be. But we’re getting there.”