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Providence Steamrollers (NFL)
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===NFL years=== [[File:Football game at Providence Cycledrome 1928.jpg|thumb|right|A 1928 football game at the [[Cycledrome]]]] Providence joined the NFL in time for the 1925 season. By that time only three players from the 1924 team were still in the line-up when the team's first practice of 1925 was held on September 17. In fact, only about a dozen of them wore Steam Rollers colors for the team's debut in the NFL.<ref name="Gill" /> The Steam Rollers played mediocre football in their first two NFL seasons, but posted a strong 8β5β1 record in 1927 with [[Jim Conzelman]] as the team's head coach. For his per game salary of $292, Conzelman not only coached the team but also played [[quarterback]] in the single-wing formation. The star player for Providence was [[Halfback (American football)|halfback]] [[Wildcat Wilson|George "Wildcat" Wilson]], a 1925 [[All-American]] from the [[University of Washington]] who had spent the 1926 season as the head of the traveling [[Los Angeles Wildcats (AFL)|Los Angeles Wildcats]] of the [[American Football League (1926)|AFL]].<ref name="Roller">{{cite journal | title=The Steam Roller | journal=Coffin Corner | publisher=Professional Football Researchers Association | volume=2 | issue=3 | year=1980 | pages=1β13 | url=http://www.profootballresearchers.org/Coffin_Corner/02-03-029.pdf | author=Hogrogian, John | url-status=dead | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101127035624/http://profootballresearchers.org/Coffin_Corner/02-03-029.pdf | archivedate=2010-11-27 }}</ref> ====1928 championship season==== [[File:Steam Roller 1928 World Champions pennant.jpg|thumb|1928 World Champions pennant.]] Providence opened its [[1928 Providence Steam Roller season|1928 season]] against [[Red Grange]] and the [[New York Yankees (NFL)|New York Yankees]], Wilson's rival from the AFL. The Steam Rollers led the Yankees 20β7 at halftime and held that score throughout the second half. However, the team's next game resulted in a 10β6 loss to the Frankford Yellow Jackets. However, the team soon rebounded with a four-game winning streak over the Dayton Triangles (28β0), Yankees (12β6), [[Pottsville Maroons]] (13β6) and [[1928 Detroit Wolverines (NFL) season|Detroit Wolverines]] (7β0). The Steam Rollers faced the Yellow Jackets again at [[Frankford Stadium]] on November 17, which resulted in a scoreless tie. However a week later, at the Cycledrome, Providence finally avenged its only loss of the season with a 6β0 victory over the Yellow Jackets. The team would then post wins over the [[New York Giants]] (16β0) and Pottsville (7β0), before ending its season with a 7β7 tie, against the [[Green Bay Packers]]. Providence was named the 1928 NFL Champions. Prior to the 1932 season, the NFL team with the best winning percentage was named the NFL Champions. Despite the Yellow Jackets winning 3 more games than the Steam Rollers and posting an 11β3β2 record, Providence was awarded the title due to having a better winning percentage with an 8-1-2 season.<ref name="Roller" /> A "victory banquet" at the [[Providence Biltmore|Biltmore Hotel]] took place a week later. At the banquet, each player was rewarded with a gold watch. It was also at this event that Conzelman was given a trophy and named the team's "Most Valuable Player". Five of the Steam Rollers players gained All-NFL honors when the league issued its official honor roll on December 23. Wildcat Wilson and [[Clyde Smith (American football)|Clyde Smith]] were named to the first team, while [[Curly Oden]], [[Milt Rehnquist]], and [[Gus Sonnenberg]] were placed on the second team.<ref name="Roller" /><ref>{{cite journal | title=Steam Rolled | journal=Coffin Corner | publisher=Professional Football Researchers Association | volume=2 | issue=3 | year=1980 | pages=1β4 | url=http://www.profootballresearchers.org/Articles/Steamrollered.pdf | author=Carroll, Bob | url-status=dead | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100929154916/http://profootballresearchers.org/Articles/Steamrollered.pdf | archivedate=2010-09-29 }} </ref> ====NFL firsts==== Over the course of the next seven years, the team not only won an NFL championship but also established three league "firsts." In 1925, Providence was the first NFL team to play its home games in a bicycle racing stadium (a [[velodrome]]). In 1929, the Steam Rollers established two NFL "firsts." In the six-day period between November 5 and November 10, 1929, Providence played four games. The marathon string began against the [[Staten Island Stapletons]], the [[Chicago Cardinals]] and concluded with a two-game series against the [[Frankford Yellow Jackets]]. Although the Steam Rollers made history, their 0β3β1 record during that six-day stretch proved to be a scheduling disaster. During the second game of that four-game series, Providence hosted the Cardinals on November 6. The game was played at night at nearby [[Kinsley Park]], where floodlights recently had been installed. The teams had originally been scheduled to play on Sunday, November 3, but heavy rains made the Cycledrome field unplayable. Since neither team wanted to lose a payday, the historic night game was hastily scheduled. Because of this, Providence made history again by being the first team to host an NFL game at night under floodlights. Although the Steam Rollers lost 16β0, the game was declared a success because 6,000 fans attended.<ref>http://www.profootballhof.com/history/decades/1920s/providence.aspx Decade-by-Decade: The 1920s and Providence (note: this reference erroneously calls the home field the "''Cyclodome''")</ref>
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