1925 Rock Island Independents season

National Football League team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1925 Rock Island Independents season was their sixth and final season in the National Football League. The team failed to improve on their previous league record of 5–2–2, losing three NFL games.[1] They finished eighth in the NFL.[2]

Quick facts Rock Island Independents season, Owner ...
1925 Rock Island Independents season
OwnerDale Johnson
General managerA.H. Bowlby
Head coachRube Ursella
Home stadiumDouglas Park
Results
Record5–3–3 NFL
6–3–3 overall
League place8th in NFL
Close

The team would join the upstart rival American Football League for the 1926 season.

Background

The 1925 season would prove to be the final campaign of the Rock Island Independents as part of the National Football League. The year started promisingly, with business manager A.H. Bowlby representing the club at the league's annual scheduling meeting, held the weekend of August 1–2 at the Sherman Hotel in Chicago.[3] Interest in booking the Independents for 1925 was high, with Chris O'Brien, owner of the Chicago Cardinals, and representatives of the Duluth Kelleys immediately seeking to schedule home-and-home dates and other teams lining up for single games.[3]

This early agreement with the Cardinals would become the focus of a disagreement in October, when Bowlby managed to add a game with the Chicago Bears at Cubs Park to fill what had become an open date on November 1.[4] O'Brien objected to the appearance of the Green-and-White in the Windy City to start November, believing that it would undercut attendance for the previously scheduled game against the Cardinals on November 29.[4] After negotiations, both games were ultimately held.

Schedule

The 1925 Independents schedule as announced following the August 1–2 owners' meeting in Chicago.
More information Game, Date ...
Game Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap Sources
1 September 20 Chicago Bears T 0–0 0–0–1 Douglas Park 2,500 [5] Recap [6][7][8]
2 September 27 Dayton Triangles T 0–0 0–0–2 Douglas Park 2,500 [9] Recap [10][11]
3 October 4 Green Bay Packers W 3–0 1–0–2 Douglas Park 3,500 [12] Recap [13][14][15]
4 October 11 at Duluth Kelleys W 12–0 2–0–2 Athletic Park 4,000 [16] Recap [17][18]
5 October 18 at Green Bay Packers L 0–20 2–1–2 City Stadium 5,000 [19] Recap [20][21][22]
6 October 25 Kansas City Cowboys T 3–3 2–1-3 Douglas Park 1,500 Recap [23][24]
7 November 1 at Chicago Bears L 0–6 2–2–3 Cubs Park 8,000 Recap
– November 8 Hammond Pros Canceled due to snow [25]
– November 11 at Clinton Legion W 23–6 — Clinton, Iowa —
8 November 15 Kansas City Cowboys W 35–12 3–2–3 Douglas Park 1,500 Recap [26][27]
9 November 22 Milwaukee Badgers W 40–7 4–2–3 Douglas Park 1,200 Recap [28][29]
10 November 26 at Detroit Panthers W 6–3 5–2–3 Navin Field 5,000 Recap [30][31]
11 November 29 at Chicago Cardinals L 0–7 5–4–3 Comiskey Park 3,000 Recap
Note: Game in italics against non-NFL team. Armistice Day: Nov. 11. Thanksgiving Day: Nov. 26.
Close

Standings

More information NFL standings, W ...
NFL standings
W L T PCT PF PA STK
Chicago Cardinals * 11 2 1 .846 229 65 W2
Pottsville Maroons * 10 2 0 .833 270 45 W5
Detroit Panthers 8 2 2 .800 129 39 W1
Akron Pros 4 2 2 .667 65 51 L2
New York Giants 8 4 0 .667 122 67 W1
Frankford Yellow Jackets 13 7 0 .650 190 169 W2
Chicago Bears 9 5 3 .643 158 96 W3
Rock Island Independents 5 3 3 .625 99 58 L1
Green Bay Packers 8 5 0 .615 151 110 W1
Providence Steam Roller 6 5 1 .545 111 101 L1
Canton Bulldogs 4 4 0 .500 50 73 L1
Cleveland Bulldogs 5 8 1 .385 75 135 L1
Kansas City Cowboys 2 5 1 .286 65 97 W1
Hammond Pros 1 4 0 .200 23 87 L3
Buffalo Bisons 1 6 2 .143 33 113 L4
Duluth Kelleys 0 3 0 .000 6 25 L3
Rochester Jeffersons 0 6 1 .000 26 111 L5
Milwaukee Badgers 0 6 0 .000 7 191 L6
Dayton Triangles 0 7 1 .000 3 84 L7
Columbus Tigers 0 9 0 .000 28 124 L9
Close
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.
* The Pottsville Maroons were suspended from the league in December,
and the Chicago Cardinals named the NFL champions.

Season review

The year started with two scoreless ties and a 3–0 victory over the Green Bay Packers — the three points scored in three games hardly rocket fuel for fan enthusiasm. Even the feel-good moment of an upset victory in the third game proved short-lived, however, when a rematch with the Packers two weeks later ended in a 20–0 pummeling regarded as the worst defeat in Rock Island franchise history.[21]

Despite continued extensive and positive coverage in the four daily newspapers of the Rock Island–Moline–Davenport metro area, paid attendance at home games went into the tank, with only 1,500 fans showing up for a game with the Kansas City Cowboys traveling team. Legendary halfback Jim Thorpe was added to the Independents' roster for a rematch three weeks later after having started the season with the New York Giants.[32]

Business manager Bowlby expressed disappointment over the attendance of the first three home games in 1925, noting that paid admissions had been insufficient to cover expenses of the team.[33] "We are losing money every day at home," Bowlby told one reporter, adding that in 1924 a weaker team had achieved almost double the average attendance.[33] The little town of Green Bay, population 35,000, could put 5,000 bodies into the stands to see Rock Island play; the 165,000 people of the Tri-Cities could muster barely more than half of that.[33] The situation cut deep.

The Islanders hoped for a saving turnout of 10,000 for its next home date, slated for November 8 against the Hammond Pros.[33] Instead, they were met with disaster. A fall snowstorm blanketed the field with snow, chasing away prospective fans. The call was made not to play in the elements after the visitors had traveled to Douglas Field from Indiana,[25] presumably putting the home team on the hook for payment of visitor travel costs.

Presold tickets were to be valid for a makeup game scheduled for November 22, initially planned as the completion of the postponed game with Hammond but ultimately played against the Milwaukee Badgers.[34] An Armistice Day game on the road against the American Legion team of Clinton, Iowa — no better than a break-even proposition financially — was scheduled as a stop-gap.

As the 1925 season came down the home stretch, the Islanders' financial situation was clearly perilous. One local newspaper warned that "the future of National League football in the tri-cities rests on the attendance at the Kansas City game and civic clubs are cooperating with the Islanders in their efforts to keep Sunday football."[26] Another paper editorialized that attendance at the November 22 second Kansas City game "will answer locally as to whether fans desire a continuance here of professional football as furnished by the Independents."[35]

The result of the call to arms proved underwhelming, with "a handful of fans, perhaps 1,500," making their way to the turnstiles to support the home team in their resounding 35–12 win over the overmatched Kansas City squad.[27] Despite failing the exam, Tri-City fans were given a final opportunity to lend support, with one more home game added to the schedule "against either Duluth or Milwaukee" the following week.[27]

The bitingly cold winds of fall triumphed, with a "disappointing" trickle of fans coming to see the green-and-white take on the Milwaukee Badgers.[29] One local newspaper estimated the paltry crowd at just 1,200.[28] Another paper chalked up virtually the entire gate to the efforts of the local Elks Club to save the team through a presale of tickets.[29]

A final decision on the future of the team was promised shortly.[28]

The financial crisis

Despite a passable league record of 5–3–3, 1925 proved to be a year of severe financial crisis for the Independents, with the local press noting that with a series sub-2,000 person home crowds "the management of the team has gone far down into debt."[36] Expenses had been heavy and losses great for the team's sixth year in the National Football League. According to team secretary A.H. Bowlby and others, only "definite assurance of a paying proposition next year" would allow the team to take the field in Rock Island.[36]

The roll of the dice would be on membership in a new league to rival the NFL — the American Football League, founded by jilted New York team owner Charlie Pyle as a vehicle for his New York Yankees, starring superstar halfback Red Grange.

Roster

Linemen

More information Name, Age ...
Name Age Games Starts Height Weight
Paul Anderson 23 1 0 6'0" 200
Lyle Burton 25 7 6 6'1" 195
Forrest Cotton 24 8 5 6'1" 195
George Dahlgren 38 1 0 5'10" 200
Frank DeClerk 25 6 1 5'9" 191
Ed Herman 23 1 1 5'10" 175
Louie Kolls 33 11 10 6'1" 205
Joe Little Twig 28 10 10 5'11" 183
Joe Rooney 27 10 9 6'0" 177
Duke Slater 27 11 11 6'1" 215
George Thompson 26 11 11 6'1" 210
Chet Widerquist 30 11 11 6'1" 219
Note: Excludes Clinton Legion game. Pro Football Hall of Fame members in bold.
Close

Backs

More information Name, Age ...
Name Age Games Starts Height Weight
Johnny Armstrong 28 11 8 5'8" 170
Les Belding 25 1 0 5'11" 195
Buck Gavin 34 5 5 5'10" 179
Harry Hall 23 1 1 5'11" 165
Dutch Hendrian 29 1 1 5'9" 182
Chuck Hill 21 1 1 5'8" 190
Jim Kendrick 32 1 1 6'0" 195
Roddy Lamb 26 9 8 5'6" 160
Vince McCarthy 25 4 2 5'10" 165
Eddie Novak 28 11 8 5'9" 175
Evar Swanson 23 2 1 5'9" 171
Jim Thorpe 38 2 2 6'1" 202
Rube Ursella 35 11 9 5'9" 172
Note: Excludes Clinton Legion game. Pro Football Hall of Fame members in bold.
Close

References

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI