
For fans yearning to watch professional outdoor tackle football again, the 47-day wait is over.
The United Football League begins its second season today when the St. Louis Battlehawks take on the Houston Roughnecks at TDECU Stadium. Kickoff is 8 p.m. E.T.

The lone Saturday game pits the San Antonio Brahmas at the Arlington Renegades (4 p.m.).
And on Sunday, the Michigan Panthers travel to Tennessee to battle the Memphis Showboats (noon) followed by the defending UFL champion and three-time spring football king Birmingham Stallions squaring off with the DC Defenders in Washington (3 p.m.).
To say the leadup to Game Week has been smooth sailing, however, would be a lie.
Last Sunday, Defenders coach Reggie Barlow stepped down to become the head coach at Tennessee State University, and on Monday Ken Whisenhunt took a leave of absence from his gig as Showboats coach after accepting the job in September.
Thus, Shannon Harris will serve as interim head coach for DC, while Memphis will be led by Jim Turner.
Barlow decided to return to his college coaching roots (he previously served as HC at Alabama State and Virginia State), and Whisenhunt departed for personal reasons.
“If and when Ken Whisenhunt is ready to return to the UFL family,” a league statement read, “we will welcome him with open arms.”
Perhaps the most serious issue is labor: as of this writing, players still don’t have a contract. The United Football Players Association (UFPA) filed a claim of unfair labor charges with the National Labor Relations Board on March 14, alleging – among other things – that the league had threatened to cut players who participated in “protected union activities.”
The good news, though, is that high-level, pay-for-play minor league spring football is back for a fourth year. The original USFL made it just three seasons, and the World League of American Football exited North America after two years, took two years off, and reformed with an all-European lineup of franchises.
(The 2009-12 United Football League lasted four seasons, but it played in the fall).
Although minor league ball is transient in nature, fans who’ve followed the spring game since its reboot in 2022 will see plenty of familiar faces. Chief among them is Arlington QB Luis Perez, who has been there – and there and there – done that – and that and that – and got enough T-shirts (and game jerseys) to fill a closet.
He’s even written a book titled The Spring King: A Champion’s Journey of Passion, Persistence and Unlimited Possibility.
Now 30 and a veteran of the Alliance of American Football, XFL 2.0, The Spring League, modern USFL, XFL 3.0 and now UFL, his shot at a full-time NFL roster spot is fading. Still, he’s been outstanding in spring competition.
Last year he led the UFL in passing with 2,310 yards and 18 touchdowns.
“To me, these leagues are super important, especially for the quarterback position,” said Perez, who has been on the practice squads of four different NFL clubs. “Because if you’re stuck on a practice squad where you can’t really get hit, can’t simulate the rush, can’t get live bullets besides the preseason, it’s a phenomenal way for quarterbacks to develop and I think me playing in these leagues and starting most of the games I played in, it’s helped me develop.”
A story I’m keeping a close eye on is the return of Alex McGough to the Stallions.
After being a key cog in Birmingham’s first two championships (he was USFL MVP in 2023), McGough was signed by the Green Bay Packers’ in July of ’23 where he spent most of his time on the practice squad. He ended up trying out as wide receiver in an effort to stick on the roster, but was ultimately released.
Now he’s back behind center and will compete with Matt Corral for playing time as Skip Holtz’s club seeks to continue their spring dominance.
“Just getting back to playing quarterback again kinda feels like, not really an adjustment, but a homecoming,” McGough said. “It felt good to sit in the room with Skip again and hearing him talk. We have a mutual respect for each other. I respect his coaching career and coaching style and the way he calls games, and I respect the way he teaches players.
“He’s not a big yeller/screamer, he just wants to help people. He always says he’s a teacher first, then a coach.”
Other returning spring ball standouts include DC QB Jordan Ta’amu, Michigan safety Kai Nacua and St. Louis wideout Hakeem Butler.
Yet. while the league is full of good players – some just a break away from trading up to the NFL – the main lure for me is the experimental nature of the game.
If you’re playing in the offseason, you need to be offbeat.
The biggest rule change for the UFL in 2025 is kickoffs, and it’s based on the NFL dynamic kickoff (which was a tweak of the XFL 2023 rule).
Starting tonight, kickoffs will start from the 30-yard line after being at the 20-yard line last season. The 10 remaining players on the kickoff team will line up at the receiving team’s 40-yard line. All kicking team players were at the 20-yard line, including the kicker, in 2024.
The receiving team’s set up zone will stretch from its 35-yard line to the 30-yard line and at least nine players must be in that zone. Last year, the receiving team had to have a minimum of eight players, but no more than nine players, in their set up zone, which was the kicking team’s 30- to 40-yard lines (10-yard zone).
The landing zone will be from the receiving team’s 20-yard line to the goal line, and if the ball doesn’t reach the landing zone, it will be spotted at the 40-yard line.
Finally, there are two touchback spots: the 35-yard-line for balls kicked into the end zone and the 20-yard line for balls that hit in the landing zone and then enter the end zone.All touchbacks were placed at the 25-yard line last season.
The onside kick option has been eliminated completely and replaced by the fourth-and-12 scrimmage play from a team’s own 28-yard line.
There has also been an upgrade to coach’s challenges. Each head coach will get a second challenge if the first is successful, and the head coach can challenge any officiating decision if his team has a timeout remaining.
Otherwise, the “greatest hits” from the UFL’s first season return, such as the tiered one, two and three-point conversions, overtime shootouts from the five-yard line and the option of a double forward pass behind the line of scrimmage.
As was the case last year, all the teams will be based in Arlington during the week and travel to host cities for games.
So, if you’re ready for football again, you’ve got 12 consecutive weeks of the UFL, ending with the championship game on June 14.
Enjoy.
You going to any of the home Stallions games Scott
Nah. I’m strictly a casual observer now. I’ll do some general UFL columns now and again, but it’s time to leave “live” coverage to those who get paid to do it.