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Defunct American football franchise From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Miami Seahawks were a professional American football team based in Miami, Florida. They played in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) in the league's inaugural season, 1946, before the team was relocated to Baltimore. They are notable as the first major league sports franchise in Miami.
Founded | 1946 |
---|---|
Folded | 1947 |
Based in | Miami, Florida |
League | All-America Football Conference (1946) |
Division | Eastern Division |
Team history | Miami Seahawks (1946) |
Team colors | Orange, White, Green[1] |
Head coaches | Jack Meagher (games 1–6) Hamp Pool (games 7–14) |
General managers | Jack Espey[2] |
Owner(s) | Harvey Hester |
AAFC Championship wins | 0 |
Home field(s) | Burdine Stadium |
The Seahawks were coached initially by Jack Meagher and then by Hamp Pool. The team faced a difficult schedule filled with many early road games, and finished the 14-game regular season at 3–11, last in the AAFC. The franchise, which by that time had accrued $350,000 in debt, was seized by the AAFC after the end of the season after its owner was declared bankrupt, and its assets were purchased by a group of entrepreneurs who reorganized it as the original incarnation of the Baltimore Colts.
Florida did not have another professional football team for 20 years, until the (fourth) American Football League (founded in 1960) added the Miami Dolphins in 1966, while the Seahawks name would be revived when the National Football League added the Seattle Seahawks in 1976 after a public vote of possible names. Neither of these teams are considered to be related to the Miami AAFC team.
The Miami Seahawks were the last of the AAFC's charter teams to be established: originally, there was a Baltimore franchise which was to have been owned by retired boxer Gene Tunney, but Tunney's bid fell through as he was unable to secure a deal to use city-owned Municipal Stadium on 33rd Street, built in 1922 in the former Venable Park of northeast Baltimore (site of the future Memorial Stadium, rebuilt 1950–1954).[3]
A group of Miami football boosters, led by Harvey Hester, seized on the chance to bring a major league team to their city. The AAFC, needing an eighth team to avoid byes in the schedule, readily granted Hester a franchise:[4] the Seahawks thus became the first major league sports team to be based in Miami.[5] Home games were played at Burdine Stadium, later called the Miami Orange Bowl.[6]
The Seahawks stood out from the other AAFC franchises in several ways:
The Seahawks hired Iowa Pre-Flight Seahawks coach Jack Meagher as head coach and former Washington Redskins general manager Jack Espey as GM. Their schedule was quite difficult from the beginning: they played seven of their first eight games on the road. Their first game was a harbinger of things to come, with a 44–0 thrashing at the hands of the Cleveland Browns.
By the time of their first home game, they had a record of 0–3–0, leading local papers to describe them as "woefully inept".[7] Meagher resigned on October 22 after winning just one of his first six games, with assistant Hamp Pool, the captain of the 1940 and 1941 Chicago Bears NFL championship teams, being forced to take over as head coach.
After a 1–7–0 start, the team were in last place when they returned home to host their final six games. For the aforementioned reasons, the team would have had difficulty filling their stadium even in the best of circumstances, and in any case fans had quickly lost interest in the struggling team, and a paltry total of 49,151 fans [10] [11] paid to attend the Seahawks' home games: this included a miserable 2,340 against Brooklyn, the second lowest attendance at any professional football game since 1939 (excluding 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic severely limited attendance). [7] [12] Further, Cleveland and San Francisco had completed their 14-game regular seasons before the Seahawks hosted their final two home games.
The team also played all of its November home games on Monday nights, the first time in major professional football that such a move had ever been attempted more than once in a year.
At the end of the season, the team was $350,000 in debt, including $80,000 in outstanding travel and payroll expenses.[8] This was well beyond Hester's ability to pay, and to make matters worse, his boosters walked away upon realizing the extent of the debt. Other football boosters in Miami wanted to buy the team, but were unwilling to pay the substantial debt, so they wanted to wait another year to make a bid.[7]
Before the Miami boosters could make a bid, however, Hester was declared bankrupt, leaving AAFC Commissioner Jim Crowley with no option but to seize the team. In January 1947, the AAFC approved a bid by Washington, D.C. attorney Robert D. Rodenburg and four other businessmen; the Rodenburg-led group effectively moved the team to Baltimore and rebranded it as the first incarnation of the Baltimore Colts.[8]
The fiasco left local officials weary of upstart professional football leagues. By 1960, Miami was much more comparable in size to established major professional sports markets. Nevertheless, when the American Football League awarded Ralph Wilson a charter franchise for Miami, the city refused to grant him a lease at the Orange Bowl. Wilson eventually established his team in Buffalo, New York where they became the Buffalo Bills. However, once it became clear that the AFL was a far more viable venture, the municipal government reversed its stance. In 1965, the AFL awarded an expansion franchise to lawyer Joe Robbie and actor Danny Thomas, the Miami Dolphins, which would become a far more successful team on and off the field.[13]
After the NFL and AFL merged, the Seahawks nickname would be revived (ironically, at the opposite geographical corner of the contiguous U.S.) when the Seattle Seahawks joined the NFL in 1976.
Season | W | L | T | Finish | Playoff results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miami Seahawks | |||||
1946 | 3 | 11 | 0 | 4th AAFC East | N/A |
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