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Rock Island Independents

The Rock Island Independents were a professional American football team, based in Rock Island, Illinois, from 1907 to 1926. The Independents were a founding National Football League franchise. They hosted what has been retrospectively designated the first National Football League game on September 26, 1920 at Douglas Park. The Independents were founded in 1907 by Demetrius Clements as an independent football club. Hence, the team was named the "Independents."

Rock Island Independents
Founded1907
Folded1926
Based inRock Island, Illinois, United States
LeagueIndependent (1907–1919)
National Football League (1920–1925)
American Football League (1926)
Team historyRock Island Independents (1907–26)
Team colorsGreen and white
  
Head coachesDick Liitt (1912–1913)
Joseph Smith (1914)
Walter Flanigan (1915-1916, 1918)
Ted Guyer (1917)
Rube Ursella (1919–1920, 1925)
John Roche (1919)
Frank Coughlin (1921)
Jimmy Conzelman (1921–22)
Herb Sies (1923)
Johnny Armstrong (1924, 1926)
General managersDemetrius Clements (1907–1914)
Walter Flanigan (1915–1923)
Vince McCarthy (1924–1926)
Owner(s)Demetrius Clenents (1907–1914)
Walter Flanigan (1915–1923)
Dale Johnson (1923–1926)
AFL Championship winsnone
Other League Championship wins(1) 1919 (self-proclaimed)
Undefeated seasons(5) 1908, 1910, 1912, 1913, 1918
Home field(s)Douglas Park (1907–1925)
Browning Field (1926)
Fan websitehttp://www.rockislandindependents.com/

In 1926, the Independents left the NFL to become a charter member of the first American Football League, the only NFL team to do so. The Independents then folded along with the entire league in 1927.[1][2][3]

Pro Football Hall of Fame alumni Jimmy Conzelman (1920–1921), Joe Guyon (1924), Ed Healey (1920–1922), Duke Slater (1922-1926), and Jim Thorpe (1924–1925) played for the Independents.

History

Early history

One of the first professional football teams, the Independents were founded in 1907 by Demetrius Clements as an independent football club. The independent team had no athletic club affiliation, no social club ties and no corporate company backing or sponsorship. As a result, the team was named the "Independents."

The Independents played in Douglas Park (1907–1925) and Browning Field (1926). After its founding, the 1910 team went undefeated and were not scored on in five games. Many of the players from the 1910 team reunited in 1912 and, under Coach John Roche, the Independents won eight games without giving up a score.

Walter Flanigan was the owner of the Independents 1915 to 1923. Dale Johnson then owned the team from 1924 until it folded, along with the rest of the American Football League in 1926.[4]

Walter Flanigan had joined the Independents as a backup end in 1912. For the following two seasons, he served as the team's assistant manager, under then-manager Jack Roche.[5] In 1915, Flanigan became the owner of the team and later promoted the Independents by scheduling two home games in 1917 against the Minneapolis Marines. This contest helped the Independents gain legitimacy. Rock Island lost to the Marines by a score of 7–3 in front of over 6,400 fans at Douglas Park in the first game on November 4. The two teams played again on November 18 and Rock Island lost again, 33–7, in the second game in front of 4,500 fans.[6][7] However, World War I and the military draft put a temporary halt to Flanigan's plans of expanding the team into new markets.[8]

 
The Rock Island Independents in 1919, "Champions of the USA"

In 1919, Flanigan hired Rube Ursella of the Minneapolis Marines to serve as a player-coach. Ursella brought several other Minneapolis players with him. These new players would help improve play and help secure the team an invitation to join the NFL. The Independents lost only to the Hammond Pros, led by George Halas in 1919. Flanigan then challenged the Canton Bulldogs to a "championship" game, offering a $5,000 guarantee if they would come to Rock Island for the game.

But Canton, which had already won the "Ohio League" championship by defeating the Massillon Tigers, turned down the offer. It is likely that Canton's player/coach Jim Thorpe and owner Ralph Hay felt that Flanigan could not deliver on his $5,000 guarantee. However, the Independents still had defeated the Columbus Panhandles 49–0 and the Indians 17–0 that season. In 1919, the season prior to the establishment of the National Football League, they claimed to be "Champions of the USA". The invitation to Canton led to the Independents being invited to the September 17, 1920 historic meeting on the formation of the National Football League.[9]

National Football League

The National Football League was formed over the course of two meetings in 1920. On August 20, 1920 an initial meeting was held by representatives of the Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Cleveland Tigers, and Dayton Triangles. The meeting was held at the Jordan and Hupmobile auto showroom in Canton, Ohio and resulted in the formation of the American Professional Football Conference (APFC).[10][11]

A second and considerably larger meeting was held on September 17, 1920. The meeting was again at Canton owner Ralph Hay's Hupmobile dealership in Canton and Independents owner Walter Flanigan was present to represent the Independents. Representatives of eleven teams were present at the second meeting: the four teams from the first meeting, plus the Decatur Staleys, Chicago Cardinals, Massillon Tigers, Hammond Pros, Muncie Flyers, Rock Island Independents and Rochester Jeffersons. The minutes of this meeting are in Pro Football Hall of Fame archives.[12] The league was renamed to the American Professional Football Association (APFA), and the number of teams was expanded, with league play to begin in 1920.[10]

The newly formed league elected Jim Thorpe as its first President and consisted of 14 teams. The Buffalo All-Americans, Chicago Tigers, Columbus Panhandles, and Detroit Heralds joined the league during the year. The Massillon Tigers from Massillon, Ohio was also at the September 17 meeting, but did not field a team in 1920. After the formation of the league, Flanigan was named to the committee that created the league's constitution. Today, only two of these franchises, the Decatur Staleys (now the Chicago Bears) and the Chicago Cardinals (now the Arizona Cardinals), remain as NFL franchises.[13][14]

 
Douglas Park in 1920

On September 26, 1920, the Independents hosted the first official game featuring a team from the APFA.[15] Thus, the Independents' Douglas Park became the site of the first ever National Football League contest. Just nine days after the league had formed, on September 26, 1920, the Independents defeated the St. Paul Ideals 48–0 in the first contest involving a member team of the APFA.[2][11]

A week later, on October 3, 1920, the Independents defeated the Muncie Flyers 45–0 at Douglas Park in the first full week of APFA league play.[16][17] 3,100 fans were in attendance as Arnie Wyman, former Minnesota great, made his debut for the Islanders, scoring three touchdowns. This might have been the first NFL game ever played between two NFL teams, however, NFL historical records don't indicate the kickoff time for this game or the other APFA game played that day between the Dayton Triangles and the Columbus Panhandles in Dayton, Ohio. [18]

The Independents posted 4–2–1 records in the league's first year. They had the same record the next two seasons, with five of their six losses in three years coming to George Halas and the Decatur Staleys/Chicago Staleys/Chicago Bears.[19] On June 24, 1922, the APFA changed its name to the National Football League (NFL).[20][21]

On October 16, 1921, the Independents battled back from a 7–0 deficit against the Chicago Cardinals to lead 14–7 in the second quarter. The comeback was sparked by two touchdowns, scored by player-coach Frank Coughlin. Flanigan then ordered the team's tackle, Ed Healey relieve Coughlin. Once Coughlin was safely on his way toward the sideline, Healey delivered a message to Jimmy Conzelman from Flanigan, it read: "Coughlin was fired! The new coach was Conzelman!" This act marked the first and only time an owner hired a new coach in the middle of a game. In 1922, Flanigan sold the contract of Ed Healey, to Halas and the Chicago Bears for $200. However, Healey soon became a star for the Bears and would later be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964. In 1923, Flanigan left the Independents to concentrate on his real estate and insurance businesses.[8]

In 1923, Flanigan sold the Independents to Dale Johnson, a local businessman. Johnson hired Vince McCarthy, the Independents' back-up quarterback as the new general manager. With Rock Island High School alumni and Olympian Sol Butler joining the squad, Rock Island went 2–3–3 in 1923, and rebounded to post winning seasons in 1924 and 1925.

Jim Thorpe, considered "the World's Greatest Athlete", joined the Independents in 1924 and the team went 5–2–2 in league play. After the 1925 season they toured nationally to promote pro football, often under the name "Tampa Cardinals".[9] After the 1925 season, Thorpe formed a team composed primarily of his teammates from the Rock Island Independents, that would play several games throughout Florida. In a 1926 New Year's Day football exhibition, the Cardinals played against the Chicago Bears led by Red Grange. The game itself was billed as a clash of old vs. new, with Grange, the rising star, taking on Thorpe, the aging legend. During the game Grange rushed for a 70-yard touchdown as the Bears notched a 17–3 victory at Plant Field in Tampa, Florida.[22][23]

The Independents' overall NFL record was 26–14–9, with five winning seasons in six years. After finishing fourth in 1920, their best overall finish in the National Football League standings was fifth, which they accomplished three times: in 1921 and 1922 under Jimmy Conzelman, and in 1924 under Johnny Armstrong.[9]

American Football League

class=notpageimage|
The 1926 American Football League had teams playing in nine U.S. cities, including Rock Island and the traveling Los Angeles franchise

In 1926, football star Red Grange and his agent, C. C. Pyle, formed the American Football League (AFL) after Pyle was denied ownership of an NFL franchise in New York City. In what proved to be a fatal move, after the 1925 season Johnson moved the team to the American Football League. Johnson felt that the American Football League, which featured Red Grange, would out-perform the NFL. The Independents then signed Elmer Layden, one of the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame for 1926. Founding American Football League teams for 1926 were the Boston Bulldogs, Brooklyn Horsemen, Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Panthers, Los Angeles Wildcats, Newark Bears, New York Yankees, Philadelphia Quakers and the Rock Island Independents. Rock Island left the NFL to join the new league. The Independents also moved from Douglas Park in Rock Island to Browning Field in neighboring Moline, Illinois for the 1926 season. The Independents were the only NFL team to make the jump to the rival league.

The AFL did not pay as much as the NFL did a year prior and Independents players left the team for bigger salaries with other NFL teams. As a result, the Independents ended their season with a 2–6–1 record. Coached by Johnny Armstrong, the Independents played their first three games at Browning Field and then played the rest of their 1926 games as a traveling team. The AFL folded after the season and the Independents were rejected in their attempt to rejoin the NFL. They played as a semi-pro team in 1927, and then went out of business.[9]

Stadium

From their inception until their last season, the Independents played at Douglas Park in Rock Island, Illinois, from 1907–1925. In 1926, in what became their final year of existence, the Independents moved to Browning Field in neighboring Moline, Illinois. Both locations are still in use today.[24]

Douglas Park is located at the corner of 18th Avenue and 9th Street in Rock Island, Illinois. Douglas Park was also the home of the minor league baseball Rock Island Islanders during the Independents era. Today, the site has baseball field and a playground and hosts some lower level Rock Island High School events. Douglas Park hosts an annual tribute football game to the Independents, played in retro uniforms and using early football rules.[24][25][26]

Browning Field, the Independents' home in 1926, is located at 16th Street and 23rd Avenue in Moline, Illinois. The Independents shared the stadium with the minor league baseball Moline Plowboys. Today, Browning Field is home to Moline High School sports teams and the adjacent Wharton Field House is the former home of the National Basketball Association's Tri-Cities Blackhawks, today's Atlanta Hawks.[27][28]

Notable players

Rock Island Independents Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
Jimmy Conzelman HB/QB 1921–1922 1964
Joe Guyon T/HB 1924 1966
Ed Healey T, G, End 1920–1922 1964
Jim Thorpe Back 1924–1925 1963
Duke Slater T 1922–1926 2020

Season-by-season results

Year W L T Finish Coach
1907 2 1 3
1908 4 0 0
1909 0 3 0
1910 5 0 0
1911 Did Not Play
1912 8 0 0 Dick Liitt
1913 6 0 1 Dick Liitt
1914 5 2 0 Joseph Smith
1915 5 1 1 Walter Flanigan
1916 5 3 1 Walter Flanigan
1917 7 3 0 Ted Guyer
1918 5 0 0 Walter Flanigan
1919 9 1 1 Rube Ursella, John Roche
Joined the American Professional Football Association
1920 6 2 2 3rd Rube Ursella
1921 4 2 1 5th Frank Coughlin, Jimmy Conzelman
AFPA is renamed the National Football League
1922 4 2 1 5th Jimmy Conzelman
1923 2 3 3 12th Herb Sies
1924 5 2 2 5th Johnny Armstrong
1925 5 3 3 8th Rube Ursella
Moved to American Football League (1926)
1926 2 6 1 7th Johnny Armstrong
AFPA/NFL-AFL Totals 28 20 13

A second, unrelated, "Rock Island Independents" played at the Northwest Football League in 1936.

Notable games

Independent

  • November 19, 1916. Defeated Moline Indians 21–3. Douglas Park. 3,000 in attendance
  • November 4, 1917. Lost to Minneapolis Marines 7–3. Douglas Park 6,400.
  • November 18, 1917. Lost to Minneapolis Marines 33–7. Douglas Park. 4,500.
  • October 12, 1919. Lost to Hammond All-Stars 12–7. Douglas Park. 7,000.
  • November 19, 1919. Defeated Moline Fans Association 57–0. Douglas Park. 2,000.

AFPA

NFL

  • October 1, 1922. Defeated Green Bay Packers. 19–14. Douglass Park. 3,500.
  • October 8, 1922. Lost to Chicago Bears 6–10. Douglas Park. 4,749.
  • November 19, 1922 Lost to Chicago Bears 3–0. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 5,600.
  • September 30, 1923. Defeated Chicago Bears 3–0. Douglas Park. 3,500.
  • November 18, 1923. Lost to Chicago Bears 7–3. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 6,500.
  • December 9, 1923. Lost to Chicago Bears 29–7. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 6,000.
  • September 28, 1924. Tied Chicago Bears 0–0. Douglas Park. 4,500.
  • November 2, 1934. Tied Chicago Bears 3–3. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 6,000.
  • December 14, 1924. Defeated Chicago Bears 7–6. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 7,000.
  • September 29, 1925. Tied Chicago Bears 0–0. Douglas Park. 2,000.
  • October 4, 1925. Defeated Green Bay Packers 3–0. Douglas Park. 3,000.
  • October 18, 1925. Lost to Green Bay Packers 0–20. City Stadium. 7,000.
  • November 1, 1925. Lost to Chicago Bears 6–0. Cubs Park (Wrigley Field) 8,000.
  • November 26, 1925. Defeated Detroit Panthers 6–3. Tiger Stadium.
  • November 29, 1925. Lost to Chicago Cardinals 0–7. Comiskey Park. 3,000.

AFL

External links

  • Peterson, Robert W. (1997). Pigskin: The Early Years of Pro Football. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511913-4.
  • Braunwart, Bob & Bob Carroll (1983). (PDF). Coffin Corner. Professional Football Researchers Association. 5 (3): 1–7. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 22, 2012.
  • Braunwart, Bob & Bob Carroll (1981). (PDF). Coffin Corner. Professional Football Researchers Association. 3 (2): 1–4. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 11, 2012.
  • Rock Island Independents Historical Site

References

  1. ^ "NFL founded in Canton - Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site". www.profootballhof.com.
  2. ^ a b "St. Paul Ideals at Rock Island Independents - September 26th, 1920". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  3. ^ "Football Firsts - Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site". www.profootballhof.com.
  4. ^ Peterson, Robert W. (1997). Pigskin: The Early Years of Pro Football. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511913-4.
  5. ^ "Walter Flanigan". Rock Island Independents.com. Retrieved March 29, 2012.
  6. ^ "1917 Minneapolis Marines - The Pro Football Archives". profootballarchives.com.
  7. ^ "1917 Rock Island Independents - The Pro Football Archives". profootballarchives.com.
  8. ^ a b Braunwart, Bob; Carroll, Bob (1983). (PDF). Coffin Corner. Pro Football Researchers Association. 5 (3): 1–7. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 11, 2012.
  9. ^ a b c d Braunwart, Bob & Bob Carroll (1983). (PDF). Coffin Corner. Professional Football Researchers Association. 5 (3): 1–7. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 22, 2012.
  10. ^ a b (PDF). The Coffin Corner. Professional Football Researchers Association. 2 (8). 1980. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 6, 2009. Retrieved February 7, 2013.
  11. ^ a b "NFL founded in Canton - Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site". www.profootballhof.com.
  12. ^ "Sept. 17, 1920 -- The Founding of the NFL - Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site". www.profootballhof.com.
  13. ^ "National Football League (NFL)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  15. ^ "Football History - Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site". www.profootballhof.com.
  16. ^ "1920 APFA Standings & Team Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  17. ^ "Rock Island Independents 1920 Game Log". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 11, 2012. Retrieved June 9, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ "Rock Island Independents". Illinois Ancestors. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  20. ^ "Sept. 17, 1920 – The Founding of the NFL". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  21. ^ "1922 American Professional Football Association changes name to National Football League". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved June 29, 2017.
  22. ^ "GRANGE'S LONG RUN BREAKS FLORIDA TIE; Dashes 70 Yards to Score on Tampa Cardinals -- Bears Win by 17 to 3. STERNAMAN ALSO TALLIES Second Touchdown Follows Star's Sprint in Last Period -- Quarter Makes 11 Points". The New York Times. January 2, 1926.
  23. ^ Jam, Professor. "History of Professional Football and Stadium Sports in Tampa, Florida". BuccaneersFan.com Fanatical Fan site.
  24. ^ a b "Douglas Park". Rock Island, IL.
  25. ^ "mcubed.net : NCAAF Football : Series records : Illinois vs. Iowa". www.mcubed.net.
  26. ^ SCHORPP, DOUG. "EXCHANGE: Rock Island game recalls early days of NFL". chicagotribune.com.
  27. ^ Green, Doug. "Moline's Browning Field turns 100". The Quad-City Times.
  28. ^ "Wharton Field House Home – Wharton Field House / Browning Field – Moline-Coal Valley School District No. 40". www.molineschools.org.
  29. ^ "1926 Rock Island Independents - The Pro Football Archives". profootballarchives.com.
  30. ^ "The Pro Football Archives - Pro Football Statistics and History". profootballarchives.com.

rock, island, independents, were, professional, american, football, team, based, rock, island, illinois, from, 1907, 1926, independents, were, founding, national, football, league, franchise, they, hosted, what, been, retrospectively, designated, first, nation. The Rock Island Independents were a professional American football team based in Rock Island Illinois from 1907 to 1926 The Independents were a founding National Football League franchise They hosted what has been retrospectively designated the first National Football League game on September 26 1920 at Douglas Park The Independents were founded in 1907 by Demetrius Clements as an independent football club Hence the team was named the Independents Rock Island IndependentsFounded1907Folded1926Based inRock Island Illinois United StatesLeagueIndependent 1907 1919 National Football League 1920 1925 American Football League 1926 Team historyRock Island Independents 1907 26 Team colorsGreen and white Head coachesDick Liitt 1912 1913 Joseph Smith 1914 Walter Flanigan 1915 1916 1918 Ted Guyer 1917 Rube Ursella 1919 1920 1925 John Roche 1919 Frank Coughlin 1921 Jimmy Conzelman 1921 22 Herb Sies 1923 Johnny Armstrong 1924 1926 General managersDemetrius Clements 1907 1914 Walter Flanigan 1915 1923 Vince McCarthy 1924 1926 Owner s Demetrius Clenents 1907 1914 Walter Flanigan 1915 1923 Dale Johnson 1923 1926 AFL Championship winsnoneOther League Championship wins 1 1919 self proclaimed Undefeated seasons 5 1908 1910 1912 1913 1918Home field s Douglas Park 1907 1925 Browning Field 1926 Fan websitehttp www rockislandindependents com In 1926 the Independents left the NFL to become a charter member of the first American Football League the only NFL team to do so The Independents then folded along with the entire league in 1927 1 2 3 Pro Football Hall of Fame alumni Jimmy Conzelman 1920 1921 Joe Guyon 1924 Ed Healey 1920 1922 Duke Slater 1922 1926 and Jim Thorpe 1924 1925 played for the Independents Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 National Football League 1 3 American Football League 2 Stadium 3 Notable players 4 Season by season results 5 Notable games 5 1 Independent 5 2 AFPA 5 3 NFL 5 4 AFL 6 External links 7 ReferencesHistory EditEarly history Edit One of the first professional football teams the Independents were founded in 1907 by Demetrius Clements as an independent football club The independent team had no athletic club affiliation no social club ties and no corporate company backing or sponsorship As a result the team was named the Independents The Independents played in Douglas Park 1907 1925 and Browning Field 1926 After its founding the 1910 team went undefeated and were not scored on in five games Many of the players from the 1910 team reunited in 1912 and under Coach John Roche the Independents won eight games without giving up a score Walter Flanigan was the owner of the Independents 1915 to 1923 Dale Johnson then owned the team from 1924 until it folded along with the rest of the American Football League in 1926 4 Walter Flanigan had joined the Independents as a backup end in 1912 For the following two seasons he served as the team s assistant manager under then manager Jack Roche 5 In 1915 Flanigan became the owner of the team and later promoted the Independents by scheduling two home games in 1917 against the Minneapolis Marines This contest helped the Independents gain legitimacy Rock Island lost to the Marines by a score of 7 3 in front of over 6 400 fans at Douglas Park in the first game on November 4 The two teams played again on November 18 and Rock Island lost again 33 7 in the second game in front of 4 500 fans 6 7 However World War I and the military draft put a temporary halt to Flanigan s plans of expanding the team into new markets 8 The Rock Island Independents in 1919 Champions of the USA In 1919 Flanigan hired Rube Ursella of the Minneapolis Marines to serve as a player coach Ursella brought several other Minneapolis players with him These new players would help improve play and help secure the team an invitation to join the NFL The Independents lost only to the Hammond Pros led by George Halas in 1919 Flanigan then challenged the Canton Bulldogs to a championship game offering a 5 000 guarantee if they would come to Rock Island for the game But Canton which had already won the Ohio League championship by defeating the Massillon Tigers turned down the offer It is likely that Canton s player coach Jim Thorpe and owner Ralph Hay felt that Flanigan could not deliver on his 5 000 guarantee However the Independents still had defeated the Columbus Panhandles 49 0 and the Indians 17 0 that season In 1919 the season prior to the establishment of the National Football League they claimed to be Champions of the USA The invitation to Canton led to the Independents being invited to the September 17 1920 historic meeting on the formation of the National Football League 9 National Football League Edit The National Football League was formed over the course of two meetings in 1920 On August 20 1920 an initial meeting was held by representatives of the Akron Pros Canton Bulldogs Cleveland Tigers and Dayton Triangles The meeting was held at the Jordan and Hupmobile auto showroom in Canton Ohio and resulted in the formation of the American Professional Football Conference APFC 10 11 A second and considerably larger meeting was held on September 17 1920 The meeting was again at Canton owner Ralph Hay s Hupmobile dealership in Canton and Independents owner Walter Flanigan was present to represent the Independents Representatives of eleven teams were present at the second meeting the four teams from the first meeting plus the Decatur Staleys Chicago Cardinals Massillon Tigers Hammond Pros Muncie Flyers Rock Island Independents and Rochester Jeffersons The minutes of this meeting are in Pro Football Hall of Fame archives 12 The league was renamed to the American Professional Football Association APFA and the number of teams was expanded with league play to begin in 1920 10 The newly formed league elected Jim Thorpe as its first President and consisted of 14 teams The Buffalo All Americans Chicago Tigers Columbus Panhandles and Detroit Heralds joined the league during the year The Massillon Tigers from Massillon Ohio was also at the September 17 meeting but did not field a team in 1920 After the formation of the league Flanigan was named to the committee that created the league s constitution Today only two of these franchises the Decatur Staleys now the Chicago Bears and the Chicago Cardinals now the Arizona Cardinals remain as NFL franchises 13 14 Douglas Park in 1920 On September 26 1920 the Independents hosted the first official game featuring a team from the APFA 15 Thus the Independents Douglas Park became the site of the first ever National Football League contest Just nine days after the league had formed on September 26 1920 the Independents defeated the St Paul Ideals 48 0 in the first contest involving a member team of the APFA 2 11 A week later on October 3 1920 the Independents defeated the Muncie Flyers 45 0 at Douglas Park in the first full week of APFA league play 16 17 3 100 fans were in attendance as Arnie Wyman former Minnesota great made his debut for the Islanders scoring three touchdowns This might have been the first NFL game ever played between two NFL teams however NFL historical records don t indicate the kickoff time for this game or the other APFA game played that day between the Dayton Triangles and the Columbus Panhandles in Dayton Ohio 18 The Independents posted 4 2 1 records in the league s first year They had the same record the next two seasons with five of their six losses in three years coming to George Halas and the Decatur Staleys Chicago Staleys Chicago Bears 19 On June 24 1922 the APFA changed its name to the National Football League NFL 20 21 On October 16 1921 the Independents battled back from a 7 0 deficit against the Chicago Cardinals to lead 14 7 in the second quarter The comeback was sparked by two touchdowns scored by player coach Frank Coughlin Flanigan then ordered the team s tackle Ed Healey relieve Coughlin Once Coughlin was safely on his way toward the sideline Healey delivered a message to Jimmy Conzelman from Flanigan it read Coughlin was fired The new coach was Conzelman This act marked the first and only time an owner hired a new coach in the middle of a game In 1922 Flanigan sold the contract of Ed Healey to Halas and the Chicago Bears for 200 However Healey soon became a star for the Bears and would later be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964 In 1923 Flanigan left the Independents to concentrate on his real estate and insurance businesses 8 In 1923 Flanigan sold the Independents to Dale Johnson a local businessman Johnson hired Vince McCarthy the Independents back up quarterback as the new general manager With Rock Island High School alumni and Olympian Sol Butler joining the squad Rock Island went 2 3 3 in 1923 and rebounded to post winning seasons in 1924 and 1925 Jim Thorpe considered the World s Greatest Athlete joined the Independents in 1924 and the team went 5 2 2 in league play After the 1925 season they toured nationally to promote pro football often under the name Tampa Cardinals 9 After the 1925 season Thorpe formed a team composed primarily of his teammates from the Rock Island Independents that would play several games throughout Florida In a 1926 New Year s Day football exhibition the Cardinals played against the Chicago Bears led by Red Grange The game itself was billed as a clash of old vs new with Grange the rising star taking on Thorpe the aging legend During the game Grange rushed for a 70 yard touchdown as the Bears notched a 17 3 victory at Plant Field in Tampa Florida 22 23 The Independents overall NFL record was 26 14 9 with five winning seasons in six years After finishing fourth in 1920 their best overall finish in the National Football League standings was fifth which they accomplished three times in 1921 and 1922 under Jimmy Conzelman and in 1924 under Johnny Armstrong 9 American Football League Edit Phily Quakers Boston Bulldogs NY Yankees Newark Bears Cleveland Panthers Rock Island Independents LA Wildcats Chicago Bulls BrooklynHorsemenclass notpageimage The 1926 American Football League had teams playing in nine U S cities including Rock Island and the traveling Los Angeles franchise In 1926 football star Red Grange and his agent C C Pyle formed the American Football League AFL after Pyle was denied ownership of an NFL franchise in New York City In what proved to be a fatal move after the 1925 season Johnson moved the team to the American Football League Johnson felt that the American Football League which featured Red Grange would out perform the NFL The Independents then signed Elmer Layden one of the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame for 1926 Founding American Football League teams for 1926 were the Boston Bulldogs Brooklyn Horsemen Chicago Bulls Cleveland Panthers Los Angeles Wildcats Newark Bears New York Yankees Philadelphia Quakers and the Rock Island Independents Rock Island left the NFL to join the new league The Independents also moved from Douglas Park in Rock Island to Browning Field in neighboring Moline Illinois for the 1926 season The Independents were the only NFL team to make the jump to the rival league The AFL did not pay as much as the NFL did a year prior and Independents players left the team for bigger salaries with other NFL teams As a result the Independents ended their season with a 2 6 1 record Coached by Johnny Armstrong the Independents played their first three games at Browning Field and then played the rest of their 1926 games as a traveling team The AFL folded after the season and the Independents were rejected in their attempt to rejoin the NFL They played as a semi pro team in 1927 and then went out of business 9 Stadium EditFrom their inception until their last season the Independents played at Douglas Park in Rock Island Illinois from 1907 1925 In 1926 in what became their final year of existence the Independents moved to Browning Field in neighboring Moline Illinois Both locations are still in use today 24 Douglas Park is located at the corner of 18th Avenue and 9th Street in Rock Island Illinois Douglas Park was also the home of the minor league baseball Rock Island Islanders during the Independents era Today the site has baseball field and a playground and hosts some lower level Rock Island High School events Douglas Park hosts an annual tribute football game to the Independents played in retro uniforms and using early football rules 24 25 26 Browning Field the Independents home in 1926 is located at 16th Street and 23rd Avenue in Moline Illinois The Independents shared the stadium with the minor league baseball Moline Plowboys Today Browning Field is home to Moline High School sports teams and the adjacent Wharton Field House is the former home of the National Basketball Association s Tri Cities Blackhawks today s Atlanta Hawks 27 28 Notable players EditRock Island Independents Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted Jimmy Conzelman HB QB 1921 1922 1964 Joe Guyon T HB 1924 1966 Ed Healey T G End 1920 1922 1964 Jim Thorpe Back 1924 1925 1963 Duke Slater T 1922 1926 2020Season by season results EditYear W L T Finish Coach1907 2 1 31908 4 0 01909 0 3 01910 5 0 01911 Did Not Play1912 8 0 0 Dick Liitt1913 6 0 1 Dick Liitt1914 5 2 0 Joseph Smith1915 5 1 1 Walter Flanigan1916 5 3 1 Walter Flanigan1917 7 3 0 Ted Guyer1918 5 0 0 Walter Flanigan1919 9 1 1 Rube Ursella John RocheJoined the American Professional Football Association1920 6 2 2 3rd Rube Ursella1921 4 2 1 5th Frank Coughlin Jimmy ConzelmanAFPA is renamed the National Football League1922 4 2 1 5th Jimmy Conzelman1923 2 3 3 12th Herb Sies1924 5 2 2 5th Johnny Armstrong1925 5 3 3 8th Rube UrsellaMoved to American Football League 1926 1926 2 6 1 7th Johnny ArmstrongAFPA NFL AFL Totals 28 20 13A second unrelated Rock Island Independents played at the Northwest Football League in 1936 Notable games EditIndependent Edit November 19 1916 Defeated Moline Indians 21 3 Douglas Park 3 000 in attendance November 4 1917 Lost to Minneapolis Marines 7 3 Douglas Park 6 400 November 18 1917 Lost to Minneapolis Marines 33 7 Douglas Park 4 500 October 12 1919 Lost to Hammond All Stars 12 7 Douglas Park 7 000 November 19 1919 Defeated Moline Fans Association 57 0 Douglas Park 2 000 AFPA Edit September 26 1920 Defeated St Paul Ideals 48 0 Douglas Park 800 First NFL Game October 3 1920 Defeated Muncie Flyers 45 0 Douglas Park 3 100 October 17 1920 Lost to Decatur Staleys 7 0 Douglas Park 7 000 November 7 1920 Tied Decatur Staleys 0 0 Douglas Park 4 991 October 2 1921 Tied Detroit Tigers 0 0 Douglas Park 3 304 October 16 1921 Defeated Chicago Cardinals 14 7 Normal Park Chicago 4 000 October 23 1921 Defeated Detroit Tigers 14 0 Tiger Stadium 3000 October 30 1921 Defeated Green Bay Packers 13 3 Hagemeister Park Green Bay 6 000 November 13 1921 Lost to Chicago Staleys 0 3 Cubs Park 2 500 NFL Edit October 1 1922 Defeated Green Bay Packers 19 14 Douglass Park 3 500 October 8 1922 Lost to Chicago Bears 6 10 Douglas Park 4 749 November 19 1922 Lost to Chicago Bears 3 0 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 5 600 September 30 1923 Defeated Chicago Bears 3 0 Douglas Park 3 500 November 18 1923 Lost to Chicago Bears 7 3 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 6 500 December 9 1923 Lost to Chicago Bears 29 7 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 6 000 September 28 1924 Tied Chicago Bears 0 0 Douglas Park 4 500 November 2 1934 Tied Chicago Bears 3 3 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 6 000 December 14 1924 Defeated Chicago Bears 7 6 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 7 000 September 29 1925 Tied Chicago Bears 0 0 Douglas Park 2 000 October 4 1925 Defeated Green Bay Packers 3 0 Douglas Park 3 000 October 18 1925 Lost to Green Bay Packers 0 20 City Stadium 7 000 November 1 1925 Lost to Chicago Bears 6 0 Cubs Park Wrigley Field 8 000 November 26 1925 Defeated Detroit Panthers 6 3 Tiger Stadium November 29 1925 Lost to Chicago Cardinals 0 7 Comiskey Park 3 000 AFL Edit November 2 1926 Lost to New York Yankees 35 0 Yankee Stadium 35 000 November 21 1926 Lost to Chicago Bulls 3 0 Comiskey Park 1 800 29 30 External links EditPeterson Robert W 1997 Pigskin The Early Years of Pro Football Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511913 4 Braunwart Bob amp Bob Carroll 1983 The Rock Island Independents PDF Coffin Corner Professional Football Researchers Association 5 3 1 7 Archived from the original PDF on October 22 2012 Braunwart Bob amp Bob Carroll 1981 The First NFL Game s PDF Coffin Corner Professional Football Researchers Association 3 2 1 4 Archived from the original PDF on March 11 2012 Rock Island Independents Historical SiteReferences Edit NFL founded in Canton Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com a b St Paul Ideals at Rock Island Independents September 26th 1920 Pro Football Reference com Football Firsts Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com Peterson Robert W 1997 Pigskin The Early Years of Pro Football Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511913 4 Walter Flanigan Rock Island Independents com Retrieved March 29 2012 1917 Minneapolis Marines The Pro Football Archives profootballarchives com 1917 Rock Island Independents The Pro Football Archives profootballarchives com a b Braunwart Bob Carroll Bob 1983 The Rock Island Independents PDF Coffin Corner Pro Football Researchers Association 5 3 1 7 Archived from the original PDF on March 11 2012 a b c d Braunwart Bob amp Bob Carroll 1983 The Rock Island Independents PDF Coffin Corner Professional Football Researchers Association 5 3 1 7 Archived from the original PDF on October 22 2012 a b Happy Birthday NFL PDF The Coffin Corner Professional Football Researchers Association 2 8 1980 Archived from the original PDF on February 6 2009 Retrieved February 7 2013 a b NFL founded in Canton Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com Sept 17 1920 The Founding of the NFL Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com National Football League NFL Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved June 21 2013 Walter Flanigan Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 28 2016 Football History Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com 1920 APFA Standings amp Team Stats Pro Football Reference com Rock Island Independents 1920 Game Log Pro Football Reference com Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 11 2012 Retrieved June 9 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Rock Island Independents Illinois Ancestors Retrieved March 30 2012 Sept 17 1920 The Founding of the NFL Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved July 9 2012 1922 American Professional Football Association changes name to National Football League Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved June 29 2017 GRANGE S LONG RUN BREAKS FLORIDA TIE Dashes 70 Yards to Score on Tampa Cardinals Bears Win by 17 to 3 STERNAMAN ALSO TALLIES Second Touchdown Follows Star s Sprint in Last Period Quarter Makes 11 Points The New York Times January 2 1926 Jam Professor History of Professional Football and Stadium Sports in Tampa Florida BuccaneersFan com Fanatical Fan site a b Douglas Park Rock Island IL mcubed net NCAAF Football Series records Illinois vs Iowa www mcubed net SCHORPP DOUG EXCHANGE Rock Island game recalls early days of NFL chicagotribune com Green Doug Moline s Browning Field turns 100 The Quad City Times Wharton Field House Home Wharton Field House Browning Field Moline Coal Valley School District No 40 www molineschools org 1926 Rock Island Independents The Pro Football Archives profootballarchives com The Pro Football Archives Pro Football Statistics and History profootballarchives com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rock Island Independents amp oldid 1119207677, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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