1974 World Football League season

The 1974 World Football League season was the first season of the World Football League.

Twelve teams began the inaugural 1974 season, which launched July 10 and lasted 19 weeks with no bye week. The league doubled up the week of Labor Day by playing four games over the course of three weeks on a Wednesday, Monday (Labor Day), Friday, Wednesday schedule, giving the WFL teams 20 games each. Two teams, the Detroit Wheels and Jacksonville Sharks dropped out and folded after fourteen weeks, with the New York Stars and Houston Texans relocating to other markets (Charlotte and Shreveport respectively) during the season. Portland and Detroit played a week 9 regular season game in London, Ontario at Little Stadium.

The season culminated in World Bowl 1 on December 5, 1974, won by the Birmingham Americans.

1974 season

Final standings[1]

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against

Eastern Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Florida Blazers 1460.700416280
Charlotte Hornets 10100.500467350
Philadelphia Bell 9110.450493413
Jacksonville Sharks 4100.286258357
Central Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Memphis Southmen 1730.850629365
Birmingham Americans 1550.750500394
Chicago Fire 7130.350446599
Detroit Wheels 1130.071209358
Western Division
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Southern California Sun 1370.650485441
The Hawaiians 9110.450411422
Portland Storm 7121.375264424
Shreveport Steamer 7121.375240415
Notes:
(a) Jacksonville and Detroit folded after 14 games; each week thereafter, the teams that had games scheduled against those teams played each other.
(b) Shreveport Steamer began the season as Houston Texans.
(c) Charlotte Hornets began season as New York Stars; upon announcing move to Charlotte, played one away game as Charlotte Stars, and remaining games as Hornets.
(d) Chicago forfeited its 20th game to Philadelphia 2-0.

1974 Playoffs

The original WFL schedule had the three division champions plus one wild-card qualify, culminating in a "World Bowl" on the evening after Thanksgiving at the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville.

With financial problems mounting, various formats were bandied about:

  • The playoffs would be scratched and the team with the best record would be declared champion.
  • Three teams (Memphis, Birmingham, and Florida) would qualify for the playoff, with West champ Southern California left out.
  • The best eight of the remaining 10 teams would qualify.
  • The top two teams in each division would qualify, seeded entirely by won-lost record.

This last format was followed, with Birmingham and Memphis getting first-round byes. Charlotte was due to play Florida and the Hawaiians were due to play Southern California in wild-card games; the wild-card winners would advance to the semifinals, and the semifinal winners would play in the World Bowl.

However, advance ticket sales for the Blazers/Hornets matchup were so meager that the financially strapped Hornets would not have even begun to meet their travel expenses. League officials persuaded Charlotte to withdraw, and Philadelphia advanced as the East's second qualifier.

Quarterfinals

Hawaiians defeated the Southern California Sun, 32–14 (@ Anaheim, California on Wednesday, November 20, 1974)

Florida Blazers defeated Philadelphia Bell, 18–3 (@ Orlando, Florida on Thursday, November 21, 1974)

Semifinals

Birmingham Americans defeated The Hawaiians, 22–19 (@ Birmingham, Alabama on Wednesday, November 27, 1974)

Florida Blazers defeated Memphis Southmen, 18–15 (@ Memphis, Tennessee on Friday, November 29, 1974)

World Bowl

Birmingham Americans 22, Florida Blazers 21 (@ Birmingham, Alabama on Thursday, December 5, 1974)

1974 All-WFL Team

Head Coach: Jack Pardee, Florida Blazers (TSN, P&C)
Tri-MVPs: Tony Adams, Southern California, J.J. Jennings, Memphis, and Tommy Reamon, Florida.[2]
Key: PC = voted on by players and coaches of the WFL; TSN = selection by The Sporting News


See also

References

  1. "1974 World Football League Game Results". Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  2. "WFL All-Star teams". WFL.org. April 6, 2009.
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