The hockey war that wasn’t

Sit back, kids, and let me tell you the story of the Great Hockey Wars of 1991. It’s a tale of two leagues battling for the services of a young superstar – one hoping to highlight underserved markets in North America and the other vowing to take on the world.

In the end, however, nary a shot was fired and the only real casualties were egos.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

In January, 1991, news broke that the North American Hockey League was aiming to give fans in the United States and Canada another big-time professional hockey circuit. Gordon Stenback, interim league president, said Cleveland, Dallas, Miami and Hamilton, Ontario, would be charter cities with at least two more franchises (chosen among Atlanta, Houston, Providence, Rhode Island and Oakland/Sacramento) set to begin play that winter.

“The idea for this league actually got started a year and a half ago,” Stenback told the Akron Beacon Journal for a Jan. 9, 1991, story. “I had had conversations with people in major cities around the country that did not have hockey, and we decided to form a network and put together our own league.

“We are not in competition with the NHL because our teams are not in those cities.”

The franchise fee was set at $250,000 and each team was to play an 80-game schedule and work under a $3 million salary cap. Rule innovations included sudden death without goalies, elimination of the red line, and enlarging the area behind the net by moving the goal line forward.

Just over a month later, however, the NAHL had some competition in the battle of hockey upstarts.

The Continental Hockey Association – under the direction of sports entrepreneur Bill Hunter – sprang to life on February 16, promising six franchises would be in place by September with European expansion on the table.

St. Paul and Saskatoon were the two charter members, with Atlanta, Cleveland, Orlando, Miami, New England, Moscow, Prague, Milan, Vienna and Barcelona tapped as possible franchise sites. In fact, the Moscow team would be the infamous Soviet Red Army Team, rebranded for the CHA.

“We’re introducing four principal rules that we think will make our league unique,” Hunter said in an interview with the Star Tribune newspaper in Minneapolis. “First, we’re taking out the red line (for two-line passes) to speed up the game. Second, we’re moving the goals out so they will be 15 feet from the end of the boards to allow more room and eliminate a great deal of violence and delays from piling on the boards. Third, we’re going to use the international rule on icing, which means when the puck crosses the goal line there’s an immediate whistle.

“And fourth, we’re going to play a 10-minute overtime in case of ties.”

Franchise fees would be $400,000 (plus $250,000 first-year assessment) and a $100,000 contingency fund that would receive one percent of all television and marketing revenues.

Teams would operate with 23-man rosters and a $2.5 million salary cap.

Yet aside from commonalities in rule changes and some overlapping franchise targets, both the NAHL and CHA coveted Eric Lindros, who played junior hockey in the Ontario Hockey League and was considered the top up-and-coming player in the game.

In May it was reported that the CHA was putting together a three-year, $6 million package for Lindros in which the league franchises would pool resources to bring him in and then assign him to a club. The center would be paid a $1.5 million signing bonus and $1.5 million per season and he wouldn’t be drafted – simply offered a job as face of the new league.

Lindros went first in the NAHL’s inaugural draft on June 3, with Hamilton calling dibs on the 6-4, 230-pound 18-year old superstar. Perhaps trying to answer the monetary challenge of the CHA, Hamilton owner Gary Patterson said the other clubs in the NAHL were prepared to contribute one half toward Lindros’ salary, which would be comparable to the CHA’s offer.

Had Lindros opted to sign with one of the leagues, it would’ve given the fledgling organization instant credibility. Problem is, it’s hard to earn credibility if you never even make it to the ice.

When hockey season began later in 1991, the NHL Philadelphia Flyers owned the rights to Lindros – thanks to a trade with the Quebec Nordiques.

And the North American Hockey League and Continental Hockey Association? Neither got beyond a few press conferences and one player draft apiece.

Ironically, officials of the NAHL and CHA teamed up in 1992 to found the American Hockey Association, a minor league that made it through less than half a season before folding.

Thus, the last major league competition the NHL had was the World Hockey Association, which saw four of its franchises absorbed in a limited merger in 1979. But, I remain hopeful for the future of alternative hockey. Atlanta, Barcelona, Cleveland, Hamilton, Houston, Milan, Moscow, Orlando, Prague, Providence, Saskatoon and Vienna would be a solid lineup for a WHA reboot.

A merger that was a mirage

If you read my book The Home Team: My Bromance With Off-Brand Football, you’ll find 18 pages devoted to the American Football Association, and specifically the Alabama Vulcans (1979) and Alabama Magic (1982). From a talent standpoint the AFA had several quality teams during its seven-year run, but they were often overshadowed by shoestring budgets and amateurish business practices.

Between the two seasons that saw Birmingham host franchises, however, was the 1981 campaign – one that began with high hopes and flirted with a deal designed to turn the AFA into something of a “mid-major” circuit.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and instagram @scottscribe60

The summer league entered 1981 with 10 franchises; the Austin Texans, Carolina (Charlotte) Chargers, Chicago Fire, Jacksonville Firebirds, Orlando Americans, San Antonio Charros, Shreveport Steamer, Texas (Dallas) Wranglers, Virginia (Roanoke) Hunters, and West Virginia (Charleston) Rockets. With former NFL quarterback Billy Kilmer as commissioner and a three-year contract with the syndicated Mizlou Television Network in hand, it appeared the summer league was poised to be a legitimate second-tier pro football organization. But man, did things fall apart quickly.

A week before the season started Mizlou canceled its contract due to an inability to sell enough advertising in local markets, and Carolina’s franchise folded after four games. Midway through the season the AFA appeared doomed until Roger Gill shared some potential game-changing news.

Gill, former AFA commissioner and owner of the Charros, said on July 6 that the AFA was going to merge with the International Football League. The IFL had been attempting to line up owners and franchises for more than a year, and originally fashioned itself as a competitor to the NFL with hopes of starting play in 1982. By 1981, however, it was ready to scale back its expectations.

“They are committed to going with us,” Gill said in a story published in the Orlando Sentinel. “There is no question. They are as anxious to get on board with us as we are with them.”

The IFL eyed franchises in Mexico City, Los Angeles, Honolulu, San Jose, Salt Lake City, Monterrey, Portland, New York, Washington and Baltimore.

“We’ve met four or five times, and Billy Kilmer has met with them much more than that,” Gill told the paper. “They have made a lot more concessions than we have. We convinced them not to try to rob the NFL, though certain franchises may try to some degree.

“They feel there needs to be a minimum salary, and we conceded to the possibility of that.”

According to Gill the new league would receive money from Mexican TV since the potential owner of a Mexico City franchise owned a Mexican broadcasting network. And the hope was that American cable companies would want on board since the new league would have teams in major media markets.

“The whole deal is predicated on money from Mexican TV and cable TV,” Gill said. “We believe the scope will enhance the TV. There is no future in pro athletics without compensation through TV. Without it, we cannot expect to make money. Nobody in the AFA will make money this year. It’s just a matter of how much we’ll lose.”

Thing is, mergers between two leagues is next to impossible when only one league exists, and the IFL never got past the planning stage.

By the time the 1981 AFA campaign was in the books, Kilmer had resigned, a total of three franchises folded, and the league continued to toil away in virtual anonymity – and without a football business partner.

The AFA returned in 1982, but midway through its season the formation of the United States Football League was announced, shoving it even deeper into obscurity.

The American Football Association breathed its last in 1983. The final game came on July 23 at Memorial Stadium in Charlotte with the Carolina Storm blanking the San Antonio Bulls, 39-0, in the American Bowl.

The contest was played in front of 4,426 fans, and without a national television audience looking on. But once it was over the Storm – coached by outgoing boss Steve Patton (who guided the Alabama Magic in 1982) – was set to join yet another version of the International Football League in 1984.

I think you already know how that story ended.

The forgotten USFL

Remember the United States Football League?

Well, of course you do. Who can forget it?

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and instagram @scottscribe60

I still get chills when I think about the day Anaheim, Cincinnati, Washington and Philadelphia were named flagship franchises of the 12-team league. Clubs had big budgets and were prepared to empty the bank in an effort to sign the best players in football. Heck, the draft took place in November while the college football season was still underway, which was downright bodacious.

Wait … you thought I was going to talk about something else? Not today, sports fans.

Sandwiched between Dave Dixon’s original 1965 idea for a United States Football League (a January through May circuit played in warm weather cities) and his realized USFL in 1983 (spring football played in major and mid-major markets) was the 1966 version that was more talk than action. Billing itself as a third major league to rival the NFL and AFL, it made a big – if brief – splash.

On June 29, 1966, former Notre Dame head football coach Frank Leahy announced the formation of the United States Football League, which had already secured $24 million in funding to lure established superstars and top college players. The news came just three weeks after the NFL and AFL went public with news of their full merger, effective in 1970.

“We’re willing and adequately prepared to spend money for outstanding players – and can go half a million dollars to get any of them,” Leahy told the Associated Press.

Leahy said the organization of the USFL began on February 4, 1966, when a group he headed was unable to secure an AFL expansion franchise. (Dixon, by the way, used his USFL idea as leverage to help New Orleans get an NFL team).

“We will start signing college players early in November, and we’ll go after everyone,” said Leahy, who would serve as chairman of the USFL. “Our seven incorporators have a great deal of money, and I would say that we are equipped to pay anything we want to get anyone we want.”

The other investors in the league were Norman F. Hecht, Bruce A. Werlhof, Harry Kagen, A.M. Cetrulo, Chester Brewer and Clayton J. Faulkner.

Aside from Anaheim, Washington, Philadelphia and Cincinnati, eight other cities were to be announced later in the summer and the inaugural season would be played beginning in the fall of 1967.

“We have applicants from nine other cities with more than one applicant for franchises from some of them,” Leahy said. “I’ll announce six of them on July 20, three more on August 15, and the final three on September 1.”

Players would also be offered stock options.

“The boy who comes to us and makes the first team will be given a better stock option plan than the boy who sits on the bench,” Leahy said. “And the boy who makes the all-league team will get an even better one.”

One problem, however, was the lack of a major television contract. Leahy said he expected the USFL to land a lucrative deal after it established itself – likely in three years – but in the interim it would syndicate films of games for TV.

Following the initial announcement the next big reveal came on July 20, the day Leahy was supposed to introduce the league’s six newest teams. That didn’t happen, but he did report that negotiations were nearly complete to secure Comiskey Park as home to a Chicago franchise.

However, that was about the last bit of positive news to come out of the league.

On August 30, 1966, Leahy’s son, Frank Leahy Jr., said his father had resigned from the USFL because the merger of the NFL and AFL had killed its chances of success.

“We had the money,” Leahy Jr. told AP. “But we couldn’t get stadium leases. We needed first-class arenas, but they weren’t available.”

A day later Hecht, one of the original investors, said the USFL was alive and well and already had franchises in place in Washington, New Orleans, Philadelphia, San Jose, Akron, Pittsburgh and either Atlanta or Memphis. But the league, in fact, was not at all well.

It never made it to the starting gate for the 1967 season, and by spring of that year one of its founding teams – Akron – withdrew its application for USFL membership so it could join the second-tier Continental Football League. Hecht then insisted the league would regroup and be ready to go by 1968.

A quick look back at the calendar shows the USFL was not ready to go in 1968, and it would be 14 more years before an organization with that acronym – and major league aspirations – would introduce itself to the world. The NFL had already taken an “if you can’t beat ‘em, let ‘em join you” stance with the AFL, and officials had to be relieved they wouldn’t have to go to war with yet another rival in 1967. It’s too bad this version of the USFL couldn’t have taken the field, though. Competition is no fun for owners, but it’s great for fans.