The North American Indoor Football League (NAIFL) was a proposed indoor football league that announced plans in 2004 to begin play in fourteen Canadian cities beginning in February 2005. The game played was to be a unique indoor version of Canadian football. Teams were to be centrally owned, and former Edmonton Eskimos quarterback Tom Wilkinson was to serve as league president. The league never played a single game and its website went offline in early 2006.
The 14 teams announced were:
East Division
Team | City | Arena |
---|---|---|
Fredericton Feud | Fredericton, New Brunswick | Aitken Centre |
Halifax Havoc | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Halifax Metro Centre |
Montreal Machete | Montreal, Quebec | Bell Centre |
Ottawa Omega | Ottawa, Ontario | Canadian Tire Centre |
Quebec Quantum | Quebec City, Quebec | Colisee Pepsi |
St. John's Storm | St. John's, Newfoundland & Labrador | Mile One Stadium |
Toronto Terror | Toronto, Ontario | Air Canada Centre |
West Division
Team | City | Arena |
---|---|---|
Calgary Crusade | Calgary, Alberta | Pengrowth Saddledome |
Edmonton Extreme | Edmonton, Alberta | Rexall Place |
Regina Rage | Regina, Saskatchewan | Regina Agridome |
Saskatoon Swarm | Saskatoon, Saskatchewan | Credit Union Centre |
Vancouver Victory | Vancouver, British Columbia | General Motors Place |
Victoria Valor | Victoria, British Columbia | Save On Foods Memorial Centre |
Winnipeg War | Winnipeg, Manitoba | MTS Centre |
References
edit- Terry Jones (2004-06-16). "Loopy launch". Edmonton Sun. Archived from the original on July 21, 2012. Retrieved 2006-11-30.
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
External links
edit- NAIFL.ca archived on August 30, 2005
- Discussion thread at OurSportsCentral.com