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The Chicago Tigers of the American Professional Football Association (APFA) played their first and only season in 1920, the first year of the league (1920), and have the distinction of being the first NFL team to fold. They had a record of 2 wins, 5 losses and 1 tie. The team played its home games at Chicago's Wrigley Field (then called Cubs Park) and was the first NFL team to do so. The Tigers were never formally members of the APFA. However, since the team played seven games against APFA teams in 1920, resulting in a 1–5–1 league record, they are generally included in the league standings.
Founded | 1920 |
---|---|
Folded | 1920 |
Based in | Chicago, United States |
League | American Professional Football Association (1920) |
Team history | Chicago Tigers (1920) |
Team colors | Black, orange |
Head coaches | Guil Falcon (1920) |
Owner(s) | Guil Falcon (1920) |
Home field(s) | Cubs Park |
The franchise
editAccording to Emil Klosiinkski in the book, Pro Football in the Days of Rockne, the Tigers' main offensive weapon was their passing game. This specifically referred to the passes thrown by Johnny Barrett and Milt Ghee to Jack Meagher and Oscar Knop. On October 24, 1920, the Decatur Staleys (renamed the Chicago Bears in 1922) played a game against the Tigers at Cubs Park and billed it as "the season's most professional game" that would also determine the "pro title". Many Decatur games, at the time, were billed as championships in an attempt to lure crowds. The Staleys defeated the Tigers 10–0.
Winner-take-all legend
editIn 1920 the Tigers and Racine Cardinals were playing for the same Chicago fan dollar. Legend has it that the Cardinals' owner Chris O’Brien offered to play for the right to represent the city of Chicago in the APFA, and that Tigers’ owner Guil Falcon had agreed to the terms. The game resulted in a 6–3 Cardinals win, with Paddy Driscoll scoring the game's only touchdown on a 40-yard run. The Tigers finished the season with a 2–5–1 record and, as allegedly promised, dropped out of the league.
However, there are three problems with this story: first, the Tigers played two more league games after losing to the Cardinals; second, O'Brien was willing to let the Decatur Staleys play in Chicago the following season (in fact, it was the Staleys that proved to be the Tigers' actual last league opponent); and third, there is no contemporary evidence for the challenge.
According to the NFL, the Chicago Tigers folded between the 1920 and 1921 seasons.
Season-by-season
editYear | W | L | T | Finish | Coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1920 | 2 | 5 | 1 | 11th | Guil Falcon |
References
edit- Ziemba, Joe (1999). When Football Was Football: The Chicago Cardinals and the Birth of the NFL. Triumph Books. ISBN 1-57243-317-5.
- NFL Franchise Chronology: Chicago Tigers
- Klosiinkski, Emil (2006). Pro Football in the Days of Rockne. Panoply Publications. ISBN 1-886571-14-7.