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Cleveland Thunderbolts

Arena football team in Ohio, US


Summary

Arena football team in Ohio, US

FieldValue
nameCleveland Thunderbolts
logoC-Thunderbolts.gif
cityCleveland, Ohio
and Columbus, Ohio
founded1991
folded1994
colorsBlack, purple, silver, white
ownerJohn J. Kuczek (Cleveland)
coachEarle Bruce
no_league_champs0
no_conf_champs0
no_div_champs0
no_playoff_appearances1

and Columbus, Ohio

Arena Football League (–)

  • Northern Division (1992)
  • American Conference (1993–1994)
  • Columbus Thunderbolts (1991)
  • Cleveland Thunderbolts (1992–1994)
  • Ohio Expo Center Coliseum (1991)
  • Richfield Coliseum (1992–1994)

The Cleveland Thunderbolts were an arena football team based in Richfield, Ohio. The Thunderbolts were founded in 1991 and were a member of the Arena Football League (AFL). In 1994, the franchise relocated to Columbus The team played for four seasons total, making the playoffs once. They played their home games in the Richfield Coliseum. The team was moved to Cleveland by John J. Kuczek.

History

Columbus Thunderbolts

Main article: 1991 Columbus Thunderbolts season

Established as the Columbus Thunderbolts and playing its home games at the Expo Coliseum, the team relocated to Cleveland after 1991 season in the Arena Football League in 1991.

Perhaps the highlight of the team's one year in Columbus was the play of quarterback Major Harris, who rushed for 429 yards during that season, an achievement given the predominance of passing in the play of the AFL. His record was broken however in 2005 when Michael Bishop ran for 459 yards. The team was sold to John Kuczak and relocated to Cleveland.

Cleveland Thunderbolts

The Thunderbolts operated in the Cleveland area for three seasons, playing their home games in the suburban Richfield Coliseum, a considerable distance from downtown Cleveland, sharing it with the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association and the Cleveland Crunch of the National Professional Soccer League. The team qualified for the playoffs in the 1992 season, but was relocated to Columbus after the 1994 campaign.

Early in the T-Bolts short existence in Cleveland, John Kuczek was implicated in a federal securities fraud case in Florida. Prior to the team's second season in 1993, Kuczek divested himself of ownership in the club and placed it in a trust for his grandchildren. Son Jeff continued as the front office leader of the organization. Kuczek was ultimately convicted on one count of the indictment. The day before he was due to begin serving his sentence in February 1995, he committed suicide in a Salem, Ohio hotel room.

Revival of the AFL in Columbus and Cleveland

Thirteen years after the Thunderbolts played their lone season in Columbus, the city would see the AFL return when the Columbus Destroyers relocated from Buffalo and played five seasons (2004–2008) at Nationwide Arena. After a 10-year hiatus, the team was relaunched for the 2019 season.

Cleveland was also without an arena football team for 13 years until the Cleveland Gladiators moved from Las Vegas in 2008. The team has been on hiatus since the 2018 season due to the renovation of Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.

Season-by-season

Main article: List of Cleveland Thunderbolts seasons

Notable players

All-Arena players

The following Thunderbolts players were named to All-Arena Teams:

  • OL/DL Willie Fears (1)

Head coaches

NameTermRegular seasonPlayoffsAwardsWLTWin%WL
Dave Whinham-626001
Earle Bruce210000

Notes

  • The team appeared on the game EA Sports Arena Football as a hidden bonus team, as well as the sequel Arena Football: Road to Glory.

References

References

  1. (February 6, 1995). "John Kuczek, insurance man, arena football owner". Pittsburgh Power-Gazette.
  2. (February 6, 1995). "John Kuczek, insurance man, arena football owner". Pittsburgh Power-Gazette.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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