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Buffalo team (NFL)

Buffalo, New York had a turbulent, early-era National Football League team that operated under multiple names and several different owners between the 1910s and 1920s. The early NFL-era franchise was variously called the Buffalo All-Stars from 1915 to 1917,[1] Buffalo Niagaras in 1918,[2] the Buffalo Prospects in 1919,[3] Buffalo All-Americans from 1920 to 1923, Buffalo Bisons from 1924 to 1925 and in 1927 and 1929, and the Buffalo Rangers in 1926. The franchise, which was experiencing financial problems in 1928, did not participate in league play that season.

Buffalo
Founded1915
Suspended1928
Folded1929
Based inBuffalo, New York, United States
LeagueBuffalo Semi-Pro Football League (1918)
New York Pro Football League (1919)
National Football League (1920–1929)
Team historyBuffalo All-Stars (1915–1917)
Buffalo Niagaras (1918)
Buffalo Prospects (1919)
Buffalo All-Americans (1920–1923)
Buffalo Bisons (1924–1925)
Buffalo Rangers (1926)
Buffalo Bisons (1927–1929)
Team colorsBlack, orange, white
     
Head coachesBarney Lepper (1917, 1919)
Tommy Hughitt (1918, 1920–1924)
Walt Koppisch (1925)
Jim Kendrick (1926)
Dim Batterson (1927)
Al Jolley (1929)
Owner(s)Frank McNeil (1920–1923)
Tommy Hughitt/Warren D. Patterson (1924–1929)
Other League Championship wins1918 City Champs
1919 New York Pro Champs
Home field(s)Buffalo Baseball Park (1915–1923)
Canisius College (1915–1923)
Bison Stadium (1924–1929)

History edit

Prior to the NFL edit

Buffalo operated an early professional football circuit from at least the late 1800s onward. Among notable predecessors to the team discussed here were the Buffalo Oakdales, whose heyday was in the years 1908 and 1909 and who ceased operations c. 1915; the Cazenovias, who were New York's best team in 1910 and 1911; and the Lancaster Malleables, from the neighboring town of Lancaster, New York, who were the best team in the region in 1913 and 1914. These teams played each other and teams from nearby cities (for example, the Rochester Jeffersons).

The All-Stars played from 1915 to 1917 under the leadership of Eugene F. Dooley; in 1917, Dooley, along with his star player Barney Lepper, took the team on a barnstorming tour of midwestern pro football teams. In 1918, the city's teams were not allowed to play outside the area because of the 1918 flu pandemic; Dooley and Lepper discontinued the All-Stars. Shoe salesman Warren D. Patterson, at the same time as this, formed a new team known as the Buffalo Niagaras, signing former Youngstown Patricians quarterback Ernest "Tommy" Hughitt as his quarterback. As the Niagaras, the team won a citywide championship in 1918, going undefeated with a 6–0–0 record (including a forfeit), having only one touchdown scored on them in any of their six games. They were one of the few upper-level teams still able to play games that year, with most of the top-level teams (such as the Patricians, Canton Bulldogs and Massillon Tigers) all having suspended operations due to the pandemic and/or World War I player shortages; this allowed Buffalo to get a leg up on its Ohio competition and sign otherwise-unemployed players, setting a course for bringing the region on par with the Ohio League and the ultimate establishment of the NFL. With that, they could have theoretically staked a claim to being the best team in the nation, especially considering how the team would perform over the next three seasons, but the Professional Football Researchers Association is dismissive of any claim that does not come from the Ohio League, and gives the mythical "national title" to the Dayton Triangles, who also went undefeated that year. When the New York Pro Football League reopened in 1919, the team, now reorganized into a franchise known as the Prospects, defeated the Rochester Jeffersons for the league title in a two-game Thanksgiving weekend tournament. The two teams tied the Thanksgiving Day game, but Buffalo handily defeated Rochester 20–0 the following Sunday.

Lepper teamed up with Hughitt and Patterson in early 1920 to create the Buffalo All-Americans, then quickly sold the team to Frank McNeil, a somewhat abrasive and aggressive owner who was able to get the team into the National Football League for its first season. However records indicate he may not have actually entered his team into the American Professional Football Association until 1921, the All-Americans are generally shown as the third-place team in league standings from that year (the confusion stems from a statement in the minutes from the league's April 1921 reorganization meeting admitting an unidentified team from Buffalo; this may have instead been the Tonawanda Kardex, who joined the league in 1921, playing only one game). Patterson held on to the Prospects name and put together a lower quality team that played through 1923, including a 1922 game against the All-Americans themselves.[4]

The NFL edit

 
Quarterback, head coach, and part-owner Tommy Hughitt.

The All-Americans had success during its first couple of APFA seasons, posting a 9–1–1 regular season record in 1920, becoming the first professional NFL team to win by margins of 20 or more points in each of its first four games, an asterisked record which was not tied until the 2007 New England Patriots' offense duplicated the feat;[5] the asterisk is because, in the early NFL, the All-Americans played five of its 11 games against non-league opponents.[6]

The Buffalo-Phoenixville connection edit

Unique for a professional football team, the All-Americans had a sharing agreement with the Union Club of Phoenixville, a side project managed by All-Americans player Heinie Miller. Miller would take himself and seven other All-Americans to Phoenixville, Pennsylvania to play games on Saturdays (Pennsylvania had blue laws that prevented play on Sunday), and then return to Buffalo on Sundays. This sharing agreement lasted into 1921 when Miller formed the new Union Quakers of Philadelphia, but All-Americans owner Frank McNeil put a halt to the agreement halfway through the 1921 season after the Quakers played the Canton Bulldogs and wore out the All-Americans players. Five All-Americans left the team to play for the Quakers full-time; Buffalo had the pickings of the then-defunct Detroit Tigers to replenish their roster.

First trade in the NFL edit

In 1920, the Akron Pros held the All-Americans to a scoreless tie in front of only 3,000 fans. At the game, Akron owners Frank Nied and Art Ranney agreed to sell Bob Nash to Buffalo for $300 and five per cent of the gate, in the first known player deal between NFL clubs.[7]

1920 Championship issue edit

Along with the Decatur Staleys and Akron Pros, Buffalo claimed a share of the 1920 league title. That same season the Pros held the best record in the league, and only had to avoid losing a game. Meanwhile, Buffalo and the Staleys had to win in order to capture the APFA Championship. The Pros were able to hold the Staleys to a scoreless tie at Cub Park. However, the Pros still had to play the All-Americans who were fresh from a 7–3 win over the Canton Bulldogs at New York City's Polo Grounds.[8] Despite Buffalo's confidence going into the match, the Pros also held the All-Americans to scoreless tie.

Both the All-Americans and the Staleys complained about the championship, arguing that Akron had only tied, but not defeated them. However, because league president Jim Thorpe and vice president Stan Cofall were absent from the meeting, Akron's owner Art Ranney was presiding over the meeting. Joseph Carr, owner of the Columbus Panhandles, moved at the league's meeting in April 1921 to give Akron the sole title and the rights to the Brunswick-Balke Collender Cup. Buffalo finished in third place, with Chicago in second place. In a separate motion, Carr would be elected league president.[7]

According to modern NFL tie-breaking rules, the 1920 Buffalo All-Americans would be co-champions.[9] They would be tied with the Akron Pros in win percentage, 9+12 wins to 1+12 losses (.864), both teams beating out the Decatur Staleys, who would have a season that counted 11 wins to 2 losses (.846).

"Staley Swindle" edit

On November 27, 1921, the All-Americans claimed the APFA title with a record of 9–0–2. However, for reason still unknown, owner Frank McNeil agreed to play two more games. He did tell the Buffalo media that the two games were exhibitions and would have no bearing on the team's claim to the APFA title. George Halas and the Chicago Staleys manage to capture second place in the APFA in 1921, with their only loss of the season against Buffalo. McNeil scheduled the two additional games against the Pros and Staleys back-to-back. The first game was scheduled for December 3 against the tough Pros, after which his team would take an all-night train to Chicago to play the Staleys the next day.

The All-Americans defeated the Pros, arriving in Chicago worn out and in no condition to play the Staleys, and lost. McNeil still believed his team was the APFA's 1921 champion, and even invested in tiny gold footballs for his players to commemorate the achievement. However Halas declared that the title was Chicago's, basing his claim on his belief that the second game of the Buffalo-Chicago series mattered more than the first. He also pointed out that the aggregate score of the two games was 16–14 in favor of the Staleys. McNeil insisted the Buffalo All-Americans were the champions, still maintaining that the last two games his team played were merely exhibitions. It didn't matter. The league awarded the championship by a vote of the Association's executive committee in January 1922 to the Staleys.

This episode is referred to by several sports historians and Buffalo sports fans as the "Staley Swindle." McNeil eventually went to his grave trying to get the league's decision overturned. [10] In their decision, based on a generally accepted (but now obsolete) rule that if two teams play each other more than once in a season, the second game counts more than the first, the executive committee followed established tradition. Had Buffalo not played the last game, they would have had an undefeated season and won the title.[11]

In both the 1920 and 1921 seasons, Buffalo played all of its games at home (the lone exceptions being the two 1921 matches in Chicago and one against the Detroit Tigers).

Buffalo Bisons edit

Under the leadership of player-coach Tommy Hughitt, the All-Americans, though they never equaled the success of the first two seasons, continued to post winning records in 1922 and 1923. Star running back Ockie Anderson's knees deteriorated during the 1922 season, forcing his early retirement and beginning the team's decline. In 1924, owner Frank McNeil sold the team back to Hughitt and Warren D. Patterson, who immediately changed the team name to Bisons (a stock name for Buffalo sports teams) and signed several players (Pete Calac, Benny Boynton and Jim Ailinger being among them) to make another run at the title. After starting the season 6–2, the team lost their last three to once again end up marginally above .500. Hughitt retired at the end of the season. After Hughitt's retirement at the end of the 1924 season, the team struggled for the rest of its lifespan.

However, on October 1, 1925, the Bisons managed to wrestle Jim Kendrick from his contract with the Hammond Pros and signed him to play for Buffalo. In 1925 the Bisons were led by former Columbia University star and Buffalo native Walter Koppisch, who was expected to return the team to championship contention but never lived up to his billing due to a number of issues with the team surrounding him. Prior to Kendrick joining the team, the Bisons were already 0–2 on the season. Kendrick's first game with Buffalo came on Sunday, October 4, 1925, against the Rochester Jeffersons. With Kendrick in the line-up, the Bisons tied the Jeffersons and the Akron Pros in their next two games. A week later the Bisons defeated the Columbus Tigers, 17–6. However tragedy struck the team just a few days later when, team captain Walter Koppisch was injured in a car accident and was advised to sit out a few games to allow his injuries to heal.

A week later, the Bisons were defeated by the Frankford Yellow Jackets, 12–3. However, the team was scheduled to play the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds, a few days later. The game was also going to be the first game back for Koppisch. However, the Bisons, despite a strong defensive showing, could not generate their offensive potential. This game was Koppisch's last appearance in a Buffalo uniform. The team then lost their final two games of the season to the Providence Steam Rollers (10–0) and the Chicago Cardinals (23–6).

In July 1926 it was announced that Walter Koppisch would not be returning to manage the Buffalo Bisons in the upcoming season. Meanwhile, Jim Kendrick was announced to be taking over as the team's manager, and serving as a player-coach.[12]

Buffalo Rangers edit

Jim Kendrick announced his "Buffalo Rangers" experiment, fielding an exhibition team of players from Texas and the Southwestern United States for the 1926 season. His plan was that this exhibition squad would then represent Buffalo in the NFL. Because most of the players were Texans, the team was nicknamed the "Rangers" in deference to the state's legendary peacekeeping force.[12] Along with the West Coast's Los Angeles Buccaneers and the South's Louisville Colonels, it was one of three teams that represented cities outside the NFL's existing footprint.

Kendrick believed that if the players have no outside interests or anything to divert their minds from playing football, they can play better. The season's outcome would determine if his theory was correct.[13]

The Buffalo media alternately referred to the team as the "Bison Rangers," combining the old name with the new so that fans might more easily identify with the team that was on its third name in seven years. The one-year experiment brought a 4–4–2 (.500) season. Buffalo expected Kendrick to return to field the Rangers for the 1927 season, however he signed with the New York Giants, and most of the remaining players went their separate ways, citing their dislike for Buffalo's cold winters as the primary reason for leaving.[12]

Return of the Bisons and closure edit

Dim Batterson, a local high school and college coach and an assistant with the team since 1925, was brought in to coach the 1927 season. After five games (all losses, all but one being a shutout), the team suspended operations and failed to finish the season. The team did not return to play in 1928, but returned in 1929 with former Oorang Indian Al Jolley as coach. Among their players that year was Jess Rodriguez, the first Hispanic-American player in the NFL (the Frankford Yellow Jackets had hired Ignacio "Lou" Molinet two years prior, but Molinet was a Cuban national). Much like in 1927, the Bisons failed to win a game until their final game, when in a case of cosmic irony they upset the Chicago Bears 19–7; thus, the very team that had spoiled their undefeated season in 1921 saved them from the indignity of a winless season in 1929. With the Great Depression underway, the Bisons folded, never to return again. During the season, the Bisons set an NFL record of six consecutive games without ever having a lead in regulation play. The record was tied in 2012 by the Kansas City Chiefs.[14]

With the exception of the three teams that have direct descendants still in the NFL—the Bears, Arizona Cardinals and Dayton Triangles (whose remains reside in the current Indianapolis Colts), Buffalo was the longest-lived of the league's original 13 teams.

At least one further game against an NFL team was played in Buffalo in the wake of the Bisons' failure: the independent Buffalo Bears narrowly lost, 8–6, to the Cleveland Indians in a 1931 contest. Buffalo would become a regular "neutral site" for NFL exhibitions from 1938 to 1958.

The team has no official relation to future Buffalo pro football franchises: the Buffalo Indians and Tigers of the third American Football League, the Buffalo Bisons of the AAFC, or the Buffalo Bills of today which was one of the new AFL teams (formation announced in 1959) that first played in 1960.

Players of note edit

As of 2022, no All-Americans, Bisons or Rangers player had been named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. It is currently the longest existing team to have never contributed a player to the Hall, after the Jacksonville Jaguars had their first player Tony Boselli inducted in 2022.

Members of the College Football Hall of Fame edit

Others edit

Season records edit

Season Team League Regular season Post Season Results References
Finish W L T
Buffalo All-Stars
1915 1915 NYPFL 6 0 1 [15]
1916 1916 NYPFL 7 3 1 Defeated Tonawanda Kardex for city title. State title disputed with Rochester Jefferons. [16]
1917 1917 NYPFL 3 4 1 Won city title. Season cut short due to World War I. [17]
Buffalo Niagaras
1918 1918 BSPFL 1st † 5 0 0 Named BSPFL Champions † [18]
Buffalo Prospects
1919 1919 NYPFL 1st † 9 1 1 Named NYPFL Champions † [19]
Buffalo All-Americans
1920 1920 APFA 3rd 9 1 1 The APFA did not hold playoffs [20]
1921 1921 APFA 2nd 9 1 2 The APFA did not hold playoffs. There was a de facto championship between Buffalo and the Chicago Staleys [21]
1922 1922 NFL 9th 5 4 1 The NFL did not hold playoffs [22]
1923 1923 NFL 8th 5 4 3 The NFL did not hold playoffs [23]
Buffalo Bisons
1924 1924 NFL 9th 6 5 0 The NFL did not hold playoffs [24]
1925 1925 NFL 15th 1 6 2 The NFL did not hold playoffs [25]
Buffalo Rangers
1926 1926 NFL 9th 4 4 2 The NFL did not hold playoffs [26]
Buffalo Bisons
1927 1927 NFL 12th 0 5 0 The NFL did not hold playoffs [27]
1928 1928 NFL Suspended Operations
1929 1929 NFL 10th 1 7 1 The NFL did not hold playoffs [28]

External links edit

  • Historical Society of the Buffalo All-Americans, Bisons & Rangers
  • , which tracks the Football history of Western New York State.

References edit

  1. ^ Sye, Roy. Buffalo All-Stars all time results. Professional Football Researchers Association.
  2. ^ . Billsbackers.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  3. ^ . Billsbackers.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  4. ^ . Independentfootball.site90.com. 2011-10-25. Archived from the original on 2011-02-01. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  5. ^ . 2007-10-01. Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2007-10-02.
  6. ^ ESPN Monday Night Football broadcast, October 1, 2007. 2007-10-01. commentator discussion when noting the tied record post-game
  7. ^ a b Carroll, Bob (1982). (PDF). Coffin Corner. 4 (12). Professional Football Researchers Association: 1–6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-11.
  8. ^ "Buffalo Faces Canton at the Polo Grounds". Retrieved 2009-11-09.
  9. ^ "NFL Tie-Breaking Procedures". nfl.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-10-02.
  11. ^ "1921:The Staley Swindle". Retrieved 2009-11-09.
  12. ^ a b c Miller, Jeffery (2003). (PDF). Coffin Corner. 25 (6). Professional Football Researchers Association: 1–6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-26.
  13. ^ *Crippen, Ken (2002). (PDF). Coffin Corner. 24 (4). Professional Football Researchers Association: 1–6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-10-10.
  14. ^ "Kansas City Chiefs tie 83-year-old mark of shame".
  15. ^ . The Pro Football Archives. 1915-11-14. Archived from the original on 2012-04-01. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  16. ^ . The Pro Football Archives. Archived from the original on 2012-03-18. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  17. ^ . The Pro Football Archives. Archived from the original on 2008-09-04. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  18. ^ . Billsbackers.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  19. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-22. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  20. ^ "1920 Buffalo All-Americans Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  21. ^ "1921 Buffalo All-Americans Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  22. ^ "1922 Buffalo All-Americans Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  23. ^ "1923 Buffalo All-Americans Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  24. ^ "1924 Buffalo Bisons Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  25. ^ "1925 Buffalo Bisons Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  26. ^ "1926 Buffalo Rangers Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  27. ^ "1927 Buffalo Bisons Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  28. ^ "1929 Buffalo Bisons Statistics & Players". Pro-Football-Reference.com.

buffalo, team, current, buffalo, franchise, buffalo, bills, army, ranger, company, nicknamed, buffalo, rangers, ranger, infantry, company, united, states, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, . For the current Buffalo NFL franchise see Buffalo Bills For the US Army Ranger company nicknamed the Buffalo Rangers see 2nd Ranger Infantry Company United States This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Buffalo team NFL news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Buffalo New York had a turbulent early era National Football League team that operated under multiple names and several different owners between the 1910s and 1920s The early NFL era franchise was variously called the Buffalo All Stars from 1915 to 1917 1 Buffalo Niagaras in 1918 2 the Buffalo Prospects in 1919 3 Buffalo All Americans from 1920 to 1923 Buffalo Bisons from 1924 to 1925 and in 1927 and 1929 and the Buffalo Rangers in 1926 The franchise which was experiencing financial problems in 1928 did not participate in league play that season BuffaloFounded1915Suspended1928Folded1929Based inBuffalo New York United StatesLeagueBuffalo Semi Pro Football League 1918 New York Pro Football League 1919 National Football League 1920 1929 Team historyBuffalo All Stars 1915 1917 Buffalo Niagaras 1918 Buffalo Prospects 1919 Buffalo All Americans 1920 1923 Buffalo Bisons 1924 1925 Buffalo Rangers 1926 Buffalo Bisons 1927 1929 Team colorsBlack orange white Head coachesBarney Lepper 1917 1919 Tommy Hughitt 1918 1920 1924 Walt Koppisch 1925 Jim Kendrick 1926 Dim Batterson 1927 Al Jolley 1929 Owner s Frank McNeil 1920 1923 Tommy Hughitt Warren D Patterson 1924 1929 Other League Championship wins1918 City Champs1919 New York Pro ChampsHome field s Buffalo Baseball Park 1915 1923 Canisius College 1915 1923 Bison Stadium 1924 1929 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prior to the NFL 1 2 The NFL 1 3 The Buffalo Phoenixville connection 1 4 First trade in the NFL 1 5 1920 Championship issue 1 6 Staley Swindle 1 7 Buffalo Bisons 1 8 Buffalo Rangers 1 9 Return of the Bisons and closure 2 Players of note 2 1 Members of the College Football Hall of Fame 2 2 Others 3 Season records 4 External links 5 ReferencesHistory editPrior to the NFL edit Buffalo operated an early professional football circuit from at least the late 1800s onward Among notable predecessors to the team discussed here were the Buffalo Oakdales whose heyday was in the years 1908 and 1909 and who ceased operations c 1915 the Cazenovias who were New York s best team in 1910 and 1911 and the Lancaster Malleables from the neighboring town of Lancaster New York who were the best team in the region in 1913 and 1914 These teams played each other and teams from nearby cities for example the Rochester Jeffersons The All Stars played from 1915 to 1917 under the leadership of Eugene F Dooley in 1917 Dooley along with his star player Barney Lepper took the team on a barnstorming tour of midwestern pro football teams In 1918 the city s teams were not allowed to play outside the area because of the 1918 flu pandemic Dooley and Lepper discontinued the All Stars Shoe salesman Warren D Patterson at the same time as this formed a new team known as the Buffalo Niagaras signing former Youngstown Patricians quarterback Ernest Tommy Hughitt as his quarterback As the Niagaras the team won a citywide championship in 1918 going undefeated with a 6 0 0 record including a forfeit having only one touchdown scored on them in any of their six games They were one of the few upper level teams still able to play games that year with most of the top level teams such as the Patricians Canton Bulldogs and Massillon Tigers all having suspended operations due to the pandemic and or World War I player shortages this allowed Buffalo to get a leg up on its Ohio competition and sign otherwise unemployed players setting a course for bringing the region on par with the Ohio League and the ultimate establishment of the NFL With that they could have theoretically staked a claim to being the best team in the nation especially considering how the team would perform over the next three seasons but the Professional Football Researchers Association is dismissive of any claim that does not come from the Ohio League and gives the mythical national title to the Dayton Triangles who also went undefeated that year When the New York Pro Football League reopened in 1919 the team now reorganized into a franchise known as the Prospects defeated the Rochester Jeffersons for the league title in a two game Thanksgiving weekend tournament The two teams tied the Thanksgiving Day game but Buffalo handily defeated Rochester 20 0 the following Sunday Lepper teamed up with Hughitt and Patterson in early 1920 to create the Buffalo All Americans then quickly sold the team to Frank McNeil a somewhat abrasive and aggressive owner who was able to get the team into the National Football League for its first season However records indicate he may not have actually entered his team into the American Professional Football Association until 1921 the All Americans are generally shown as the third place team in league standings from that year the confusion stems from a statement in the minutes from the league s April 1921 reorganization meeting admitting an unidentified team from Buffalo this may have instead been the Tonawanda Kardex who joined the league in 1921 playing only one game Patterson held on to the Prospects name and put together a lower quality team that played through 1923 including a 1922 game against the All Americans themselves 4 The NFL edit nbsp Quarterback head coach and part owner Tommy Hughitt The All Americans had success during its first couple of APFA seasons posting a 9 1 1 regular season record in 1920 becoming the first professional NFL team to win by margins of 20 or more points in each of its first four games an asterisked record which was not tied until the 2007 New England Patriots offense duplicated the feat 5 the asterisk is because in the early NFL the All Americans played five of its 11 games against non league opponents 6 The Buffalo Phoenixville connection edit Unique for a professional football team the All Americans had a sharing agreement with the Union Club of Phoenixville a side project managed by All Americans player Heinie Miller Miller would take himself and seven other All Americans to Phoenixville Pennsylvania to play games on Saturdays Pennsylvania had blue laws that prevented play on Sunday and then return to Buffalo on Sundays This sharing agreement lasted into 1921 when Miller formed the new Union Quakers of Philadelphia but All Americans owner Frank McNeil put a halt to the agreement halfway through the 1921 season after the Quakers played the Canton Bulldogs and wore out the All Americans players Five All Americans left the team to play for the Quakers full time Buffalo had the pickings of the then defunct Detroit Tigers to replenish their roster First trade in the NFL edit In 1920 the Akron Pros held the All Americans to a scoreless tie in front of only 3 000 fans At the game Akron owners Frank Nied and Art Ranney agreed to sell Bob Nash to Buffalo for 300 and five per cent of the gate in the first known player deal between NFL clubs 7 1920 Championship issue edit Along with the Decatur Staleys and Akron Pros Buffalo claimed a share of the 1920 league title That same season the Pros held the best record in the league and only had to avoid losing a game Meanwhile Buffalo and the Staleys had to win in order to capture the APFA Championship The Pros were able to hold the Staleys to a scoreless tie at Cub Park However the Pros still had to play the All Americans who were fresh from a 7 3 win over the Canton Bulldogs at New York City s Polo Grounds 8 Despite Buffalo s confidence going into the match the Pros also held the All Americans to scoreless tie Both the All Americans and the Staleys complained about the championship arguing that Akron had only tied but not defeated them However because league president Jim Thorpe and vice president Stan Cofall were absent from the meeting Akron s owner Art Ranney was presiding over the meeting Joseph Carr owner of the Columbus Panhandles moved at the league s meeting in April 1921 to give Akron the sole title and the rights to the Brunswick Balke Collender Cup Buffalo finished in third place with Chicago in second place In a separate motion Carr would be elected league president 7 According to modern NFL tie breaking rules the 1920 Buffalo All Americans would be co champions 9 They would be tied with the Akron Pros in win percentage 9 1 2 wins to 1 1 2 losses 864 both teams beating out the Decatur Staleys who would have a season that counted 11 wins to 2 losses 846 Staley Swindle edit Further information Staley Swindle On November 27 1921 the All Americans claimed the APFA title with a record of 9 0 2 However for reason still unknown owner Frank McNeil agreed to play two more games He did tell the Buffalo media that the two games were exhibitions and would have no bearing on the team s claim to the APFA title George Halas and the Chicago Staleys manage to capture second place in the APFA in 1921 with their only loss of the season against Buffalo McNeil scheduled the two additional games against the Pros and Staleys back to back The first game was scheduled for December 3 against the tough Pros after which his team would take an all night train to Chicago to play the Staleys the next day The All Americans defeated the Pros arriving in Chicago worn out and in no condition to play the Staleys and lost McNeil still believed his team was the APFA s 1921 champion and even invested in tiny gold footballs for his players to commemorate the achievement However Halas declared that the title was Chicago s basing his claim on his belief that the second game of the Buffalo Chicago series mattered more than the first He also pointed out that the aggregate score of the two games was 16 14 in favor of the Staleys McNeil insisted the Buffalo All Americans were the champions still maintaining that the last two games his team played were merely exhibitions It didn t matter The league awarded the championship by a vote of the Association s executive committee in January 1922 to the Staleys This episode is referred to by several sports historians and Buffalo sports fans as the Staley Swindle McNeil eventually went to his grave trying to get the league s decision overturned 10 In their decision based on a generally accepted but now obsolete rule that if two teams play each other more than once in a season the second game counts more than the first the executive committee followed established tradition Had Buffalo not played the last game they would have had an undefeated season and won the title 11 In both the 1920 and 1921 seasons Buffalo played all of its games at home the lone exceptions being the two 1921 matches in Chicago and one against the Detroit Tigers Buffalo Bisons edit Under the leadership of player coach Tommy Hughitt the All Americans though they never equaled the success of the first two seasons continued to post winning records in 1922 and 1923 Star running back Ockie Anderson s knees deteriorated during the 1922 season forcing his early retirement and beginning the team s decline In 1924 owner Frank McNeil sold the team back to Hughitt and Warren D Patterson who immediately changed the team name to Bisons a stock name for Buffalo sports teams and signed several players Pete Calac Benny Boynton and Jim Ailinger being among them to make another run at the title After starting the season 6 2 the team lost their last three to once again end up marginally above 500 Hughitt retired at the end of the season After Hughitt s retirement at the end of the 1924 season the team struggled for the rest of its lifespan However on October 1 1925 the Bisons managed to wrestle Jim Kendrick from his contract with the Hammond Pros and signed him to play for Buffalo In 1925 the Bisons were led by former Columbia University star and Buffalo native Walter Koppisch who was expected to return the team to championship contention but never lived up to his billing due to a number of issues with the team surrounding him Prior to Kendrick joining the team the Bisons were already 0 2 on the season Kendrick s first game with Buffalo came on Sunday October 4 1925 against the Rochester Jeffersons With Kendrick in the line up the Bisons tied the Jeffersons and the Akron Pros in their next two games A week later the Bisons defeated the Columbus Tigers 17 6 However tragedy struck the team just a few days later when team captain Walter Koppisch was injured in a car accident and was advised to sit out a few games to allow his injuries to heal A week later the Bisons were defeated by the Frankford Yellow Jackets 12 3 However the team was scheduled to play the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds a few days later The game was also going to be the first game back for Koppisch However the Bisons despite a strong defensive showing could not generate their offensive potential This game was Koppisch s last appearance in a Buffalo uniform The team then lost their final two games of the season to the Providence Steam Rollers 10 0 and the Chicago Cardinals 23 6 In July 1926 it was announced that Walter Koppisch would not be returning to manage the Buffalo Bisons in the upcoming season Meanwhile Jim Kendrick was announced to be taking over as the team s manager and serving as a player coach 12 Buffalo Rangers edit Jim Kendrick announced his Buffalo Rangers experiment fielding an exhibition team of players from Texas and the Southwestern United States for the 1926 season His plan was that this exhibition squad would then represent Buffalo in the NFL Because most of the players were Texans the team was nicknamed the Rangers in deference to the state s legendary peacekeeping force 12 Along with the West Coast s Los Angeles Buccaneers and the South s Louisville Colonels it was one of three teams that represented cities outside the NFL s existing footprint Kendrick believed that if the players have no outside interests or anything to divert their minds from playing football they can play better The season s outcome would determine if his theory was correct 13 The Buffalo media alternately referred to the team as the Bison Rangers combining the old name with the new so that fans might more easily identify with the team that was on its third name in seven years The one year experiment brought a 4 4 2 500 season Buffalo expected Kendrick to return to field the Rangers for the 1927 season however he signed with the New York Giants and most of the remaining players went their separate ways citing their dislike for Buffalo s cold winters as the primary reason for leaving 12 Return of the Bisons and closure edit Dim Batterson a local high school and college coach and an assistant with the team since 1925 was brought in to coach the 1927 season After five games all losses all but one being a shutout the team suspended operations and failed to finish the season The team did not return to play in 1928 but returned in 1929 with former Oorang Indian Al Jolley as coach Among their players that year was Jess Rodriguez the first Hispanic American player in the NFL the Frankford Yellow Jackets had hired Ignacio Lou Molinet two years prior but Molinet was a Cuban national Much like in 1927 the Bisons failed to win a game until their final game when in a case of cosmic irony they upset the Chicago Bears 19 7 thus the very team that had spoiled their undefeated season in 1921 saved them from the indignity of a winless season in 1929 With the Great Depression underway the Bisons folded never to return again During the season the Bisons set an NFL record of six consecutive games without ever having a lead in regulation play The record was tied in 2012 by the Kansas City Chiefs 14 With the exception of the three teams that have direct descendants still in the NFL the Bears Arizona Cardinals and Dayton Triangles whose remains reside in the current Indianapolis Colts Buffalo was the longest lived of the league s original 13 teams At least one further game against an NFL team was played in Buffalo in the wake of the Bisons failure the independent Buffalo Bears narrowly lost 8 6 to the Cleveland Indians in a 1931 contest Buffalo would become a regular neutral site for NFL exhibitions from 1938 to 1958 The team has no official relation to future Buffalo pro football franchises the Buffalo Indians and Tigers of the third American Football League the Buffalo Bisons of the AAFC or the Buffalo Bills of today which was one of the new AFL teams formation announced in 1959 that first played in 1960 Players of note editAs of 2022 no All Americans Bisons or Rangers player had been named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame It is currently the longest existing team to have never contributed a player to the Hall after the Jacksonville Jaguars had their first player Tony Boselli inducted in 2022 Members of the College Football Hall of Fame edit Benny Boynton Eddie Casey Walter Koppisch Elmer OliphantOthers edit Jim Ailinger at the time of his death in 2001 the oldest surviving NFL alumnus Ockie Anderson teammate of Fritz Pollard on Union Club of Phoenixville in 1920 and considered one of the best forward passers of his era winning a national title at Colgate in 1916 Walt Brewster Pete Calac teammate of Jim Thorpe in 1920 Tommy Hughitt Heinie Miller Paul Robeson Gus Sonnenberg Lud WraySeason records editSeason Team League Regular season Post Season Results ReferencesFinish W L TBuffalo All Stars1915 1915 NYPFL 6 0 1 15 1916 1916 NYPFL 7 3 1 Defeated Tonawanda Kardex for city title State title disputed with Rochester Jefferons 16 1917 1917 NYPFL 3 4 1 Won city title Season cut short due to World War I 17 Buffalo Niagaras1918 1918 BSPFL 1st 5 0 0 Named BSPFL Champions 18 Buffalo Prospects1919 1919 NYPFL 1st 9 1 1 Named NYPFL Champions 19 Buffalo All Americans1920 1920 APFA 3rd 9 1 1 The APFA did not hold playoffs 20 1921 1921 APFA 2nd 9 1 2 The APFA did not hold playoffs There was a de facto championship between Buffalo and the Chicago Staleys 21 1922 1922 NFL 9th 5 4 1 The NFL did not hold playoffs 22 1923 1923 NFL 8th 5 4 3 The NFL did not hold playoffs 23 Buffalo Bisons1924 1924 NFL 9th 6 5 0 The NFL did not hold playoffs 24 1925 1925 NFL 15th 1 6 2 The NFL did not hold playoffs 25 Buffalo Rangers1926 1926 NFL 9th 4 4 2 The NFL did not hold playoffs 26 Buffalo Bisons1927 1927 NFL 12th 0 5 0 The NFL did not hold playoffs 27 1928 1928 NFL Suspended Operations1929 1929 NFL 10th 1 7 1 The NFL did not hold playoffs 28 External links editHistorical Society of the Buffalo All Americans Bisons amp Rangers Buffalo Bills fanclub which tracks the Football history of Western New York State References edit Sye Roy Buffalo All Stars all time results Professional Football Researchers Association History of Pro Football in Buffalo Billsbackers com Archived from the original on 2012 02 14 Retrieved 2012 11 01 History of Pro Football in Buffalo Billsbackers com Archived from the original on 2012 02 14 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Buffalo Prospects Independentfootball site90 com 2011 10 25 Archived from the original on 2011 02 01 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Patriots at Bengals Game notes 2007 10 01 Archived from the original on 2011 05 19 Retrieved 2007 10 02 ESPN Monday Night Football broadcast October 1 2007 2007 10 01 commentator discussion when noting the tied record post game a b Carroll Bob 1982 Akron Pros 1920 PDF Coffin Corner 4 12 Professional Football Researchers Association 1 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 11 Buffalo Faces Canton at the Polo Grounds Retrieved 2009 11 09 NFL Tie Breaking Procedures nfl com Retrieved 2012 11 01 Who really won the championship in 1921 p o History of Professional Football in Western New York Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2007 10 02 1921 The Staley Swindle Retrieved 2009 11 09 a b c Miller Jeffery 2003 Jim Kendrick The Man with the Plan PDF Coffin Corner 25 6 Professional Football Researchers Association 1 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 26 Crippen Ken 2002 1926 Buffalo Rangers PDF Coffin Corner 24 4 Professional Football Researchers Association 1 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 10 10 Kansas City Chiefs tie 83 year old mark of shame The Pro Football Archives The Pro Football Archives 1915 11 14 Archived from the original on 2012 04 01 Retrieved 2012 11 01 1916 All Buffalo The Pro Football Archives Archived from the original on 2012 03 18 Retrieved 2012 11 01 The Pro Football Archives The Pro Football Archives Archived from the original on 2008 09 04 Retrieved 2012 11 01 History of Pro Football in Western New York 1918 Billsbackers com Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Table Of Contents PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 22 Retrieved 2012 11 01 1920 Buffalo All Americans Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com Retrieved 2012 11 01 1921 Buffalo All Americans Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com Retrieved 2012 11 01 1922 Buffalo All Americans Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1923 Buffalo All Americans Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1924 Buffalo Bisons Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1925 Buffalo Bisons Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1926 Buffalo Rangers Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1927 Buffalo Bisons Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com 1929 Buffalo Bisons Statistics amp Players Pro Football Reference com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buffalo team NFL amp oldid 1202929290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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