The WFL’s night of champions

When you think of a world championship game, images of a glitzy trophy presentation, confetti raining down on players, and an elaborate fireworks display might come to mind.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

When you think back to the World Bowl – the one and only championship of the World Football League – none of the above applies.

In fact, the game played on December 5, 1974, started with two teams who hadn’t been paid in months and ended with the winners having their uniforms and equipment taken away by sheriff’s deputies.

Glamorous, it was not.

But I didn’t come here to bury the memory of the clash between the Birmingham Americans and Florida Blazers, but to praise it. What these players endured – and ultimately delivered – showed true championship mettle. And all the participants deserve to be remembered fondly.

For the record, Birmingham (17-5) claimed the crown with a 22-21 victory over Florida (16-7) in front of 32,376 chilly fans at Legion Field.

Joe Profit and Art Cantrelle scored first half rushing touchdowns for the winners and quarterback Matthew Reed added the “action point” conversion following the second TD. In the third quarter, George Mira hit Bob Brown on a 26-yard scoring strike to give the Americans a 22-0 advantage.

(Florida fans might recall Tommy Reamon scoring an apparent 5-yard touchdown on the game’s opening drive, only to have officials rule he fumbled before crossing the goal line. Replays show he still had possession when he reached the end zone but there were no booth reviews in 1974 so Reamon and his team got hosed).

The Blazers rallied for 21 fourth quarter points. QB Bob Davis connected with Reamon on 39-yard scoring strike to put his team on the board, and later hit Greg Latta for a 40-yard passing TD to make it a one score game.

Rod Foster added a 76-yard punt return for a touchdown in a showdown that saw the teams combine for 626 yards of total offense. Still, it’s what happened off the field that made this contest so remarkable.

The WFL was already in freefall – $20 million in debt and its credibility shot due to two franchises folding (Detroit and Jacksonville) and two others relocating (New York to Charlotte and Houston to Shreveport) in-season.

As for the last two teams standing in the postseason, Florida players hadn’t gotten a paycheck in 14 weeks and members of the Birmingham contingent had played without compensation for almost two months.

“Before the (semi-final playoff game against Memphis), the guys just came down to the point where we realized we weren’t going to get paid,” Davis told Florida Today. “We said, ‘Let’s win this one and go on to the World Bowl.’ We’ve been screwed by the league, by our owners, by the officials, by everyone. The only thing left was our desire to give ourselves something.”

In an interview with the Associated Press Blazers backup quarterback Buddy Palazzo said, “We’re supposed to be playing for a living and not getting paid. That knocks down the theory about spoiled, high-salaried athletes.”

Americans players walked out of practice the Monday before the World Bowl and demanded to be paid, but on Tuesday decided they’d take the field no matter what.

“We’re not playing for back pay,” Birmingham running back Charlie Harraway told the Associated Press. “We’re playing for a championship.”

As for a big championship game payday, that didn’t happen.

Because of the financial straits of the Americans, 30 percent of the gate would go to federal, state and local tax officials. The remaining 70 percent would be divided up among the teams.

As it turned out, Birmingham got $1,400 per player as part of the winners’ share while Florida received $1,000 per man.

“Ask these guys which would be more important to them – all their back pay or this moment,” Birmingham tackle Paul Costa said to an Associated Press reporter after the game. “It wouldn’t be a contest. This is a super feeling.”

The locker room celebration was tempered by the fact that Birmingham’s gear was confiscated immediately in order to pay off a $30,000 debt owed to the team’s equipment supplier. It was as though the party was interrupted by a raid.

“So what?” Americans owner Bill Putnam told AP. “The IRS and everybody else has liens against us, so what’s the big deal about losing our uniforms?”

However, at least one Blazer put a positive spin on it all.

“These have been the best and fondest memories of my 10-year career in football,” Florida defensive Rickie Harris told Florida Today after the WFL postmortem. “You only meet guys like this once in your lifetime. Despite all the adversity, despite everything we’ve been through, the players hung together and they played for each other.”

It’s easy to view the World Bowl as a tragicomic performance staged by a ragtag group of players in a bush league trying to disguise itself as a big league.

Easy, but wrong.

After spending so many weeks playing for nothing, on this one night simply playing the game of football meant everything to the Birmingham Americans and Florida Blazers.

And for that, they’ll always have my respect – and admiration.

I take a much deeper dive into the Americans and the WFL in my book “The Home Team” My Bromance With Off-Brand Football” available through Amazon, Barnes & Noble and IndieBound.

NISA’s big tent

All who know me know that the original North American Soccer League holds a special place in my heart. It’s why I played soccer in high school, why posters of Pelé and Kyle Rote Jr. once hung on the walls of my bedroom, and why the Beautiful Game became one of my greatest sports passions.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

I don’t care that it was built from the top down, nor do I care that it was a retirement league – show me a photo of the New York Cosmos packing Giants Stadium, George Best and Elton John “practicing” together, or the gloriously tacky fringe jerseys sported by the Caribous of Colorado – and those pictures paint a thousand words and revive hundreds of memories.

The old NASL breathed its last in 1984, however, and since then much has happened to and with association football in the United States. America’s closed system currently features Major League Soccer at the top, the United Soccer League Championship a notch below, and USL League One and the National Independent Soccer Association serving as de facto Division III leagues. There are also many semi-pro and amateur loops scattered across the country. As to which of the above are the best to follow, well, every soccer supporter has an opinion. But that, as the Kermit the Frog internet meme suggests, is none of my business.

I’ve got to tell you, though, when it comes to men’s leagues I now find myself firmly in the NISA camp. It has nothing at all in common with the old NASL other than a Cosmos-branded club, but I like its style and the renegade vibe it gives off. And my attraction to it isn’t so much for what it is, but what it might become.

NISA features my longtime favorite side, the Cosmos, so it has built-in appeal to me. Add Chattanooga FC (a club I bought into) and Detroit City FC (architects of a culture we should all buy into) to the mix, and I’m fully on board. Chicago enters the league next fall, with NISA co-founder Peter Wilt helping spearhead the effort. Wilt left the organization to do his voodoo in USL League One, but now he’s back where he started. Wilt is a true soccer guy who loves the game and will undoubtedly help the Chicagoland entry become a quick success.

(Currently you can go to chicagonisa.com and make suggestions for names and colors. I didn’t take part in the survey because that’s for Windy City folk to decide, but if you’re asking me I like “Speakeasy FC.”)

Although the situation is fluid, other clubs slated to compete in 2021 include California (Irvine) United Strikers FC, Los Angeles Force, Maryland (Montgomery County) Bobcats, Michigan (Pontiac) Stars, New Amsterdam FC and New Jersey (Bayonne) Teamsters FC.

NISA has no territorial rights so any group who wants to put down roots can put them down anywhere they think they’ll grow. New York, New Amsterdam and New Jersey form a nice little cluster in the Northeast, and Rochester applied for membership on Thursday. One would assume if NISA hangs around long enough, big market metros will provide a big tent for multiple clubs in the future while leaving plenty of room for smaller cities.

And with the addition of NISA Nation – a full-year amateur consortium for clubs eying a transition to pro soccer – there’s an open invitation to the party. Currently the Gulf Coast Premier League, Midwest Premier League, and Eastern Premier Soccer League are affiliates but there are likely more to come. Maryland, for example, parlayed EPSL membership into a spot in NISA and will begin play next spring.

As expected, there have been plenty of fits and starts. It was formed in June of 2017 but co-founder Jack Cummins died eight months later, and in May of 2018 Wilt left to start Forward Madison FC in League One. NISA went mostly radio silent for a while and when it did reemerge it took a hit when Miami FC – a founding member – bolted to the USL Championship. And the Oakland Roots were one and done this year, also jumping to the second division. Both clubs had the opportunity to move up a level, and they took it.

And whether it’s money, the COVID-19 pandemic or other circumstances, some clubs have appeared and disappeared (Atlanta SC), while others have gone on “hiatus” (North Carolina’s Stumptown Athletic and San Diego 1904).

Yet despite such challenges NISA has plans to step up – eventually – and wants to ultimately develop a promotion/relegation system. Meanwhile they’re trying to expand their footprint while maintaining a community-based sensibility.

Finding success – real, long term success – will not be easy, though. The United States Soccer Federation and MLS are joined at the hip, so it’ll be hard for NISA to make friends in high places. And since it’s trying to connect so many amateur leagues, the ruling class might think it’s getting too big for its bridges.

Still, I like its inclusiveness and willingness to provide chances for any soccer dreamers who want to take them. And for whatever reason, it’s revived a spark in my fandom.

I’m pretty sure I won’t see fringe on kits – and I’m way too old to have posters on my bedroom wall – but the National Independent Soccer Association is bringing me full circle. After becoming a fan thanks to a league that overreached, maybe now I need an underdog to help me turn back the clock.

Springing into fall action

If you’re a fan of alternative football leagues, you don’t have to wait until the XFL returns in 2022 to get your off-brand gridiron jollies.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

Next Tuesday in San Antonio The Spring League hosts a tripleheader at the Alamodome. The Alphas meet the Blues at noon, EDT; the Aviators take on the Jousters at 4 p.m.; and at 8 p.m. the Conquerors square off with the Generals. The nightcap will be televised live on Fox Sports 1. In all, the network will broadcast seven Tuesday or Wednesday night games through November 18, with a championship game set for Thanksgiving week.

“As we’ve said time and time again, FOX is football,” Mark Silverman, President of National Networks for FOX Sports, said in a press release. “We’re excited to add TSL to our already robust football programming lineup complementing our NFL and college football coverage. We believe in TSL’s mission as a developmental league and we are excited to grow with them in partnership over the coming years.”

The multi-year TV deal includes an option for the network to make a minority equity investment in TSL.

I really want to cheer for the Aviators. Their logo is stylish, and it gets extra points for featuring Howard Hughes wearing a bomber hat and goggles. And this is the young, dashing Howard Hughes, not the old, reclusive Howard Hughes who watched “Ice Station Zebra” over and over again.

However, I’ll call the Generals “my” team. They’re the only squad that has a former UAB player (wideout Andre Wilson) on the roster, and as an alum that carries a lot of weight. Plus they have two players hailing from South Carolina (the state I live in) two more players from Alabama (my home state) and two players each from North Carolina and Georgia, which are my neighbor states.

I kinda feel like I owe them my allegiance. TSL is in its fourth year but casual football fans might not be familiar with it. Although it has ‘league” in its name it mostly serves as an extended-stay scouting combine, allowing players to get game reps in hopes of moving on to the National Football League, Canadian Football League and, more recently, the XFL. According to its website, 141 TSL veterans have signed with NFL or CFL teams. It’s also been the home to high-profile second, third and final chance projects like Johnny Manziel and Greg Hardy.

Last year it partnered with the XFL to test rule innovations, so it serves as a proving ground for more than just players. Three TSL squads played a combined five games this spring before being halted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

But while the coronavirus has led to “bubble” formats for other leagues and other sports, TSL was already ahead of the curve. It’s a one-stop shop, so playing games at a single site is the way to go. Since its debut in 2017 Austin, Texas, and White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, have served as hubs.

This fall it’s the Alamodome, and with the CFL forced to cancel its 2020 season and the rebooted XFL having to shut down at the halfway mark, TSL finds itself with enough quality talent to field six teams.

“Given the reduction in roster sizes heading into NFL training camps this year and the cancellation of the CFL season, it was critical to accelerate our league expansion and provide additional development opportunities for players this fall,” The Spring League CEO Brian Woods said. “We also wanted to seize the opportunity to play TSL games when America traditionally watches football. Our plan will be to return to the spring season in 2021.”

I’m curious about how this one-off fall season impacts TSL in the future. I doubt FOX has any real ratings expectations for early week, short-season football in late October/early November, but it could give the network an idea of how to present the product next spring.

And keep in mind that TSL players aren’t earning salaries; they pay a registration fee of $2,100 and compensation comes only in the form of food and housing.

So instead of a play-for-pay league it’s actually pay-to-play (with three hots and a cot). If they stick to that model then continuing to have no ties to cities and competing at a central location makes perfect sense.

But if it decides to try to be something more – whether that’s an affiliated feeder system to the NFL or possibly an equal partner with the third iteration of the XFL – then you’re looking at cities and stadiums and player payrolls and all the pitfalls that come with them. Woods is already familiar with such a scenario; he was commissioner of the Fall Experimental Football League (FXFL), which was a minor league hoping to hitch its wagon to the NFL as a farm system. That circuit played two limited seasons in 2014-15 but suspended operations in 2016, leading Woods to segue to TSL.

So, is there any kind of appetite for glorified practice games wrapped in a bubble? I have no clue. With NFL and college football in full swing and grid competition available Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays, people might prefer to Netflix and chill on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

But it’s there if you want it. And regardless of its future, I’ll give The Spring League credit for providing off-brand football fans an unexpected present.