Harman Patil (Editor)

Seaboard Football League

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The Seaboard Football League was a minor American football league that operated from 1971 to 1974. It folded after the 1974 season as a result of the founding of the World Football League, which deprived the league of talent.

Contents

Some of the more notable Seaboard Football league alumni include Vince Papale, who went on to the WFL's Philadelphia Bell and later the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles); Joe Klecko, who "was never paid a penny" for his time and used the opportunity to earn a college scholarship and propel himself into a professional career; wide receiver Jack Dolbin, who later appeared in Super Bowl XII for the Denver Broncos; and King Corcoran, the career minor-league quarterback who would also go on to play for the Bell in the WFL. While players (such as Klecko) could play as amateurs, most players were paid a sum of $50 per game.

During the 1972 season, after the folding of the Atlantic Coast Football League, the Seaboard Football League was the second-highest ranking professional football league in the United States, behind only the NFL. The NFL played its last interleague exhibition match against an SFL team in 1972, when the New York Jets rookies defeated the SFL's Long Island Chiefs 29–3. The league dropped to third-tier after the Hartford Knights left for a revived ACFL and the league picked up teams from the semi-pro Empire Football League for play in 1973.

The league was founded with eight teams in 1971, five of which came from the Interstate Football League, two from the Mason-Dixon Football League, and one independent. The teams played a 14-game season, with all games taking place on Saturday nights. In 1972, the Hartford Knights of the ACFL joined the league, going undefeated and winning the championship then returned to the ACFL for its 1973 season. The Seaboard League again had eight franchises, but played a ten-game season. After the ACFL folded, Bridgeport Jets and the New England Colonials played joined the Seaboard League, which fielded six teams in a shortened 1974 season.

Championship games

1971 Schuylkill Coal Crackers 13, Hagerstown Bears 0

1972 Hartford Knights 17, Chambersburg Cardinals 7

1973 Chambersburg Cardinals 31, Albany Metro Mallers 12

1974 Wilkes-Barre Bullets 20, Bridgeport Jets 9

Teams

  • Albany Metro Mallers (NY) (1973)
  • Aston (PA) Knights (1972–73) / Ridley Township (PA) Knights (1971) (known as the "Green Knights" to distinguish them from the Hartford Knights in 1972)
  • Tri-Cities (NY) Jets (1973)
  • Boston Colonials (1974)
  • Bridgeport (CT) Jets (1974)
  • Bucks County (CT) Steelers (1973)
  • Chambersburg Cardinals (PA) (1971–74)
  • Conshohocken (PA) Steelers (1971–72)
  • Frederick (MD) Falcons (1971)
  • Hagerstown (MD) Bears (1971–73)
  • Hartford (CT) Knights (1972)
  • Long Island (Freeport, NY) Chiefs (1972)
  • Portsmouth (VA) Bucks (1972)
  • Reading (PA) Coal Crackers (1972)
  • Schuylkill County Coal Crackers (Pottsville PA) (1971)
  • Lackawanna County (PA) Eagles (1973–74)
  • Valley Forge (PA) Minutemen (1974)
  • Washington (PA) Generals (1971)
  • Westminster (MD) Chargers (1971)
  • Wilkes-Barre (PA) Bullets (1974)
  • Wyoming Valley (PA) Giants (1973)
  • References

    Seaboard Football League Wikipedia