Birmingham Vulcans

The Birmingham Vulcans were a professional American football team located in Birmingham, Alabama. They were members of the five-team Eastern Division of the World Football League (WFL). The Vulcans, founded in March 1975, played in the upstart league's second and final season in 1975. The team was owned by a group of Birmingham businessmen with Ferd Weil as team president.

Birmingham Vulcans
Team logo
EstablishedMarch 1975
FoldedOctober 1975
Based inBirmingham, Alabama
Home fieldLegion Field
Head coachMarvin Bass
General managerJack Gotta
LeagueWorld Football League
DivisionEastern
ColoursBlue, Red, and White
     
World Bowl wins1975 (regular season title, league folded before World Bowl could be played)

The Vulcans replaced the Birmingham Americans who had held the WFL franchise for Birmingham in 1974, winning World Bowl I in December 1974 before suffering financial collapse.[1] The Vulcans were the best team in the league in 1975 with a 9–3 record and the best at the box office until the league folded 12 weeks into its second season. After the WFL ceased operations, the Vulcans were declared league champions by virtue of having the best record.[2]

When the league folded, Birmingham and the Memphis Grizzlies attempted to get admitted into the National Football League for the 1976 season, although unlike the similar and more extensive effort in Memphis which involved actual cash deposits toward season tickets, it seemed to consist mainly of getting fans to sign a "statement of support" somewhat similar to a petition. When the Memphis effort failed, Vulcans followers were forced to accept the inevitable as well, and efforts to get the team into the more established league were abandoned.

The Vulcans name would be recycled for the Alabama Vulcans, a member of the American Football Association, in 1979.

As of April 2010, two former Vulcans players have been inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame. Birmingham native Johnny "Italian Stallion" Musso, who placed 4th in Heisman Trophy voting while playing for the Alabama Crimson Tide, was inducted in the Class of 1989.[3][4] Larry Willingham, who played for the St. Louis Cardinals and retired for medical reasons in 1973 but made a comeback in 1974 with the Birmingham Americans, was inducted in the Class of 2003.[5] Willingham was also elected to the Auburn Tigers football "1970s Team of the Decade."[5]

Schedule and results

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Key:WinLossBye

1975 regular season

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WeekDayDateOpponentResultAttendance
1SundayAugust 2, 1975Chicago WindsW 10–031,000
2SundayAugust 9, 1975Philadelphia BellW 23–1721,000
3SundayAugust 16, 1975at Jacksonville ExpressL 11–2216,049
4SundayAugust 23, 1975Southern California SunL 25–3532,000
5SundayAugust 30, 1975Shreveport SteamerW 21–818,700
6SaturdaySeptember 6, 1975at Portland ThunderW 26–86,342
7SaturdaySeptember 13, 1975San Antonio WingsW 33–2412,500
8SundaySeptember 21, 1975Charlotte HornetsW 22–1618,500
9SaturdaySeptember 27, 1975at Jacksonville ExpressL 18–2610,881
10SaturdayOctober 4, 1975at HawaiiansW 29–1618,894
11SundayOctober 12, 1975at Memphis GrizzliesW 18–1420,192
12SundayOctober 19, 1975Memphis GrizzliesW 21–0[6]35,000

[7]

See also

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References

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