Los Angeles Bulldogs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Founded1936
Ended1948
StadiumGilmore Stadium (Los Angeles) (1936–46)
Veterans Memorial Stadium (Long Beach) (1947)
HeadquarteredLos Angeles, California and
Long Beach, California, United States
Los Angeles Bulldogs
Los Angeles Bulldogs logo
Logo
General information
Founded1936
Ended1948
StadiumGilmore Stadium (Los Angeles) (1936–46)
Veterans Memorial Stadium (Long Beach) (1947)
HeadquarteredLos Angeles, California and
Long Beach, California, United States
ColorsDark Blue, Orange
   
Mascotbulldog
Personnel
OwnersLos Angeles region chapter American Legion (1936–37)
Jerry Corcoran (1938–48)
General managerHarry Myers
Head coachGus Henderson (1936–37)
Ike Frankian (1938–48)
Bill Sargent (194546)
Team history

Los Angeles Bulldogs (1936–47)
Long Beach Bulldogs (1948)

League / conference affiliations
Independent (1936, 1938)
American Football League (1937)
American Football League (1938) /
American Professional Football Association
(1939)
Pacific Coast Professional Football League (1939–48)

The Los Angeles Bulldogs were a professional American football team that competed from 1936 to 1948 (the last year as the Long Beach Bulldogs). Formed with the intention of joining the National Football League in 1937 (and turned down in favor of the Cleveland Rams), the Bulldogs were the first team on the major league level to play its home games on the American West Coast (the NFL's Los Angeles Buccaneers and the first AFL's Wildcats of 1926 were actually traveling teams based in Chicago). They were considered "the best football team in existence outside the NFL".[1]

The 1937 Bulldogs are one of three pro football teams that have gone undefeated and untied during a season, joining the 1972 Miami Dolphins (17–0–0, NFL), and the 1948 Cleveland Browns (15–0–0, AAFC). The Bulldogs hold the distinction of being the first.

The Bulldogs joined the second American Football League, in 1937 and proceeded to become the first professional football team to win a league championship with a perfect record (no losses or ties), having won all eight of its league games that season (counting all exhibition games, they won all 16 of their 1937 contests). After the dissolution of the second AFL after the 1937 season, they returned to independent football for 1938, having a 2–1–2 record against NFL teams that season.

For the 1939 season, the Bulldogs joined fellow second AFL franchise Cincinnati Bengals in joining another American Football League just before the league changed its name to the American Professional Football League. The two newcomers dominated their new league, finishing with the two greatest winning percentages, but at the league meetings, the Columbus Bullies were announced as the league champions.[2] Shortly afterward, the Bulldogs announced their intention to leave the AFL to become a charter member of a new Pacific Coast Professional Football League (the AFL soon dissipated when three more member teams defected to a new league, which soon became the “third American Football League”).

Winning PCPFL championships in 1940 and 1946, the Bulldogs were the only team to compete in the league in every year of its existence (19401948). With the establishment of the Los Angeles Rams in the NFL and Los Angeles Dons in the All-America Football Conference in 1946, the popularity of the Bulldogs diminished to the point of moving their home games from Gilmore Stadium to Veterans Memorial Stadium in Long Beach in 1948, and when the attendance dropped below 1,000 people per game, the Bulldogs – and the PCPFL – folded.

The Los Angeles Bulldogs were formed in 1936 to join the National Football League. After failed professional football leagues on the American West Coast (the Pacific Coast League of 1926 and 1934 and the American Legion Pro Football League in 1935), the Los Angeles regional chapter of the American Legion hired Harry Myers and allocated $10,000 to assemble a team following a probationary NFL franchise grant. Myers’ first hire was Gus Henderson as head coach, and they signed players with NFL experience, including lineman Ray Richards (Chicago Bears), end Ike Frankian (New York Giants), and University of Tulsa alumni Roy Berry, Hal Wickersham, Frank Greene, and Homer Reynolds.

In their inaugural 1936 season, Gil Lefebvre stood out as a punt return threat, while Berry and Ed Stark impressed crowds with long runs. Unlike typical traveling teams, the Bulldogs played all games at the 18,000-seat Gilmore Stadium. Six contests involved NFL teams—the Bulldogs beat the Chicago Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Philadelphia Eagles, tied the Brooklyn Dodgers, and were shut out by the Chicago Bears and NFL champion Green Bay Packers—finishing 6–3–1 with an average attendance of 9,400, rising above 12,000 in the season’s second half.

At the 1936 NFL owners’ meeting, Myers joined representatives from Houston and Cleveland to pitch their teams for expansion. Despite a probationary franchise and implied promise, the NFL chose Homer Marshman’s Cleveland Rams, second-place finishers in the second AFL. The Bulldogs then opted to take the Rams’ place in the AFL.

1937 in the American Football League

Despite the new league, the Los Angeles Bulldogs' roster stayed relatively constant. Former Chicago Cardinals back Al Nichelini joined the team. Back Bill Howard led the league in scoring as the Bulldogs marched through the American Football League’s schedule, being the first professional football team to win all their contests and win the league championship in the same season.

The perfect season: 1937 (8–0–0 AFL, 16–0–0 total)

Bulldogs (dark uniforms) vs Rochester Tigers, November 14, 1937

Home games are in CAPITAL letters; AFL games are in bold print

DateOpponentScore
Sep 10Pittsburgh Americans21–0
Sep 22New York Yankees27–6
Oct 3Rochester Tigers20–9
Oct 13Boston Shamrocks14–0
Oct 14Providence Steam Roller13–7
Oct 17Bristol West Ends28–7
Oct 24Cincinnati Bengals17–7
Nov 7SALINAS PACKERS13–0
Nov 14ROCHESTER TIGERS48–21
Nov 21BOSTON SHAMROCKS45–26
Nov 25NEW YORK YANKEES27–0
Dec 5Salinas Packers17–14
Dec 12CINCINNATI BENGALS14–3
Dec 19SALINAS PACKERS21–3
Dec 26COAST ALL-STARS7–3
Jan 2COAST ALL-STARS13–10

The scheduling plan adopted by the AFL and the Bulldogs as a cost containment measure helped the league inch toward its demise as the Bulldogs overwhelmed the rest of the league in the first half of the season and completed its perfect season at home in the second half. The Shamrocks and Yankees, both of which averaging over 10,000 attendance in home games in the 1936 season, totaled 4500 people in their home games against the Bulldogs in 1937. On the other hand, the Bulldogs drew 15,000 in each of their AFL home games and became the only AFL team to make a profit in the 1937 season. The league folded in 1938.

1938 and 1939

The Pacific Coast Professional Football League

References

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