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Indiana Firebirds

Arena football team


Summary

Arena football team

FieldValue
nameIndiana Firebirds
logoIndiana Firebirds Logo.png
founded1990
folded2004
cityIndianapolis, Indiana at Conseco Fieldhouse
colorsBlack, royal blue, red, burnt orange, gold, white
coachMike Wilpolt
ownerGlenn Mazula
Dave Lageschulte
general managerJoe Hennessy
John Kolner
no_div_champs6
no_league_champs1
playoff_appearances, , , , , , , , , ,
no_playoff_appearances11

the original Albany/Indiana Firebirds team

Dave Lageschulte John Kolner Arena Football League (–)

  • National Conference (1993; 1995–2000)
    • East (1995–2000)
  • American Conference (1994; 2001–2004)
    • Central (2001–2004)
  • Albany Firebirds (1990–2000)
  • Indiana Firebirds (2001–2004)
  • Eastern: , , , , ,
  • 1999
  • Knickerbocker Arena (1990–2000)
  • Conseco Fieldhouse (2001–2004) The Indiana Firebirds were a team in the Arena Football League. The team was based in Indianapolis, Indiana. Home games were played at the Conseco Fieldhouse, also the home of the Indiana Pacers of the National Basketball Association and Indiana Fever of the Women's National Basketball Association.

History

Albany Firebirds (1990–2000)

The team was founded in Albany, New York as the Albany Firebirds, and played in Albany from 1990 to 2000. At that time, home games were played at the Knickerbocker Arena (now known as the MVP Arena). The team's original ownership group was headed by Joe O'Hara, owner of the Continental Basketball Association's Albany Patroons, who would later become the AFL's second commissioner. In 2020, he revealed that he originally wanted to call the team the Nighthawks, but league founder Jim Foster wanted that nickname for a future team he planned to own after his tenure as commissioner. After getting off the phone with Foster while in Boston, he happened to see a Pontiac Firebird driving down the highway and decided to go with that name.

The Firebirds were very successful during their tenure in Albany. They won six division titles, made nine playoff appearances, and won the 1999 ArenaBowl championship.

Indiana Firebirds (2001–2004)

On October 19, 2000, the Firebirds announced they would be relocating to Indianapolis. After the move, the Firebirds competed in the Central Division of the AFL's American Conference. The Firebirds were not as successful in Indianapolis as they were in Albany, missing the playoffs twice in four seasons after having made the playoffs in all but two of their first 11 seasons.

The 2004 Firebirds just missed the playoffs after a disappointing 0–5 start. However, they finished the season winning eight of their last eleven games and were considered by some a potential contender for the 2005 Arena Bowl championship led by 2004 Rookie of the Year quarterback Zachary Paget.

However, in early September 2004, Firebirds owner Dave Lageschulte announced that his company, Lags Football LLC, would cease all business operations for the Firebirds. Lageschulte had been actively, but unsuccessfully, pursuing local investors to purchase the Firebirds since he had assumed ownership in 2002.

On September 20, 2004, the date of the announced sales deadline, the Arena Football League announced the termination of the Firebirds franchise and that the players would be made available to continuing AFL teams in a dispersal draft. However, within the week the team was purchased by Scott and Todd Hines, who run H3 Sportsgear, a sportsgear company based in Indianapolis. With AFL approval, it was hoped that the Firebirds could remain operational in Indianapolis. However, this bid floundered due to concerns that the low sale price would devalue the worth of the other 18 franchises. The former Firebirds players were made available in the dispersal draft conducted on October 14, 2004, marking the end of one of the AFL's longest-running franchises.

Resurrection of the Albany Firebirds name

After the move of the Albany Firebirds AFL franchise to Indiana, an AF2 team called the Albany Conquest took to the field to replace the arena football void left by the departure of the Firebirds. After eight seasons and troubles with fielding a winning team in recent seasons, Conquest owner Walter Robb contemplated shutting down the Conquest franchise. Then, on Friday, October 3, 2008, Robb announced the return of the team for the 2009 season but renamed as the Albany Firebirds in the hopes of "re-branding" the team.

Multiple reports in late September 2023 indicated that a team bearing the Albany Firebirds brand would play in the 2024 season. Ownership would not confirm nor deny the reports but stated that there would be an arena football team in Albany in 2024, either in the revived AFL or the Indoor Football League. On October 2, 2023, the Albany Firebirds were officially announced to be joining the AFL.

Season-by-season

-
1990
-
1991
-
1992
-
1993
-
1994
Lost Week 2 (Arizona 40–33)
-
1995
Lost Week 2 (Tampa Bay 56–49)
-
1996
Lost Week 2 (Iowa 62–55)
-
1997
-
1998
-
1999
Won Week 2 (Arizona 73–47)
Won ArenaBowl XIII (Orlando 59–48)
-
2000
-
-
2001
Won Week 2 (Tampa Bay 68–31)
Lost Week 3 (Grand Rapids 83–70)
-
2002
-
2003
-
2004
-
!Totals
}

Notable players

Arena Football Hall of Famers

No.NameYear InductedPosition(s)Years w/ Firebirds
77Sylvester Bembery2011OL/DL1994–2003
17Eddie Brown2011OS1994–2003
Mike Dailey2012Head Coach1997–2003
84Fred Gayles2002WR/DB1990–1997
?Darryl Hammond2013WR/LB1991–1994
Mike Hohensee2012Head Coach1994–1996
82Greg Hopkins2013WR/LB1996–2001
Glenn Mazula2000Owner1990–2002
?Reggie Smith2002OS1990
?Durwood Roquemore1999WR/DB1991

Individual awards

SeasonPlayerPosition
Eddie BrownOS
SeasonPlayerPosition
Eddie BrownOS
Eddie BrownOS
SeasonPlayerPosition
David McLeodWR/DB
SeasonPlayerPosition
Pete ElezovicK
Clay RushK
SeasonPlayerPosition
Chad DukesFB/LB
SeasonPlayerPosition
Adrian McPhersonQB

All-Arena players

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

  • QB Tom Porras (1), Mike Perez (2), Mike Pawlawski (1)
  • FB/LB Chad Dukes (2), Leroy Thompson (1)
  • WR/DB Reggie Smith (1), Fred Gayles (1), Merv Mosely (2), David McLeod (1), Jay Jones (1), Evan Hlavacek (1)
  • WR/LB Fred Gayles (1), Greg Hopkins (2)
  • OL/DL Sylvester Bembery (3), Kevin Murphy (1), Jerome Brown (1), Joe Jacobs (3), Jon Krick (1), Chris Snyder (1), Kyle Moore-Brown (1)
  • OS/KR Reggie Smith (1)
  • OS Eddie Brown (4)
  • DS Derek Stingley (1), Cornelius Coe (1)
  • K Gary Gussman (1), Franco Grilla (1), Pete Elezovic (1), Clay Rush (1)

All-Ironman players

The following Firebirds players were named to All-Ironman Teams:

  • FB/LB Chad Dukes (1), Rich Young (1)
  • WR/DB Evan Hlavacek (1)
  • WR/LB Greg Hopkins (2)
  • OL/DL Joe Jacobs (2), Chris Snyder (1)

All-Rookie players

The following Firebirds players were named to All-Rookie Teams:

  • QB Adrian McPherson
  • FB/LB Van Johnson
  • WR/DB Brett Bech
  • DS Cornelius Coe

Head coaches

NameTermRegular seasonPlayoffsAwardsWLTWin%WL
Rick Buffington1921003
Mike Hohensee2711022
Mike Dailey5842054Coach of the Year (1999)
Steve DeBerg05000
Mike Wilpolt83000

Former radio affiliates (6 stations)

  • WPTR/1540: Albany (1990–1991 seasons), (1993–1994 seasons)
  • WROW/590: Albany (1995–2000 seasons)
  • WHUC/1230: Hudson (1994 season)
  • WSRD/104.9: Johnstown (1994 season)
  • WSTL/1410: South Glens Falls (1994 season)
  • WCDA/96.3: Voorheesville (1992 season)

References

References

  1. Singelais, Mark. (December 11, 2009). "Firebirds won't play 2010 season". [[Times Union (Albany).
  2. Boggie. (June 9, 1990). "Firebirds Host Commandos In Arena Football Opener". [[The Daily Gazette]].
  3. (March 9, 2020). "AFL Rewind: Joe O'Hara". ArenaFan.com.
  4. (October 19, 2000). "Firebirds move to Indianapolis". OurSports Central.
  5. (December 20, 2009). "The top 10 of the Double Os". [[Times Union (Albany).
  6. Singelais, Mark. (2023-09-28). "Firebirds back? Arena football returning to MVP Arena in 2024".
  7. Haas, Griffin. (2023-10-02). "Albany Firebirds returning to AFL".
  8. Singelais, Mark. (February 5, 2011). "Father and son saga at Super Bowl". [[Times Union (Albany).
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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