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The American Football League's Foolish Club

Succeeding where previous leagues had failed, the AFL introduced an exciting brand of football forcing the NFL to change its entrenched ways

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  • By Jim Morrison
  • Smithsonian.com, January 14, 2010, Subscribe
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1960 AFL Championship Game
The 1960 AFL Championship game between the Los Angeles Chargers and Houston Oilers was typical of the high-risk, exciting brand of football the AFL was known for. (NFL / Getty Images)

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The New York Titans’ Don Maynard, another star who went on, like Blanda, to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was a castoff from the New York Giants. Len Dawson languished five years in the NFL, starting two games, then became a superstar and future Hall of Famer with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Others, like Charlie Hennigan, who was coaching a Louisiana high school team and teaching biology when the Oilers offered a tryout, never had a shot in the established league. He’d played at tiny Northwestern State College in his native Louisiana and was undrafted by the NFL. He signed with the Oilers in 1960 for a $250 bonus and a $7,500 salary. “I was so happy,” recalls Hennigan, 74.”I was going to be making as much as the principal.”

He kept a pay stub from his $270.62-a-month teaching job in his helmet as a reminder of what he’d go back to if he failed. He didn’t. Hennigan may be the most prolific receiver not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In 1961, he set a single season record for reception yards that stood until 1995. In 1964, he became the second receiver to catch more than 100 passes in a season with 101, a record that lasted until 1992.

Blanda points out there were only 12 NFL teams with 33 players on a squad when the AFL began, meaning there were a lot of good athletes available. “I know the NFL people thought we were not much better than a junior college team,” Blanda says.”But we had a lot of great players in our league.”

By the middle of the 1960s, the NFL was luring away as many players from the AFL as the AFL was from the NFL. The bidding war for players, which began when the AFL was formed (Brandt recalls the price for free agents went from $5,500 to $7,500 the first year and kept climbing) reached a peak in 1965 when the New York Jets signed Alabama quarterback Joe Namath to a three-year, $427,000 contract, the biggest deal ever for an athlete in a team sport.

That year, NBC signed a five-year, $36 million television deal with the AFL, far more than CBS was paying the NFL. The NFL responded by ordering CBS not to give AFL scores during telecasts. A year later, a gentlemen’s agreement between the leagues not to sign each other’s players was shattered when the New York Giants enticed star kicker Pete Gogolak from the Bills for a three-year, $96,000 contract. A bidding war ensued with several established NFL stars signing with the AFL.

Finally, the two leagues announced a merger in the summer of 1966. They would play the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game (the term “Super Bowl” was coined later) after the 1966 season. The NFL’s Green Bay Packers won the first two matchups, then the New York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs grabbed the next two, announcing loudly that the AFL was the NFL’s equal.

The rivalry hasn’t waned for Blanda and Hennigan, even though they draw NFL pension checks. They’re still AFL guys at heart.

“We were a better show than the NFL was,” Hennigan says. “They didn’t like us and they still don’t like us. And I don’t like them.”


Having risked his reputation by un-retiring from a 10-year career in the established National Football League for the upstart American Football League, George Blanda clearly wasn't afraid to gamble. In the final quarter of the AFL championship game on New Year’s Day 1961, the stakes were high. Backed up on their own 12-yard line, it looked like the Los Angeles Chargers might get the ball back with time to take the lead. But the Houston Oilers quarterback knew his opponents were going to blitz. He looped a swing pass to Heisman Trophy-winning running back Billy Cannon, who then broke a tackle and outraced everybody to pay dirt, giving the Oilers a 24-16 lead and the title. “That was the big play that killed them,” recalls Blanda, now 82, of the game.

Blanda ended up throwing for 301 yards and three touchdowns, outdueling the Chargers’ quarterback, future congressman and vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp. He also kicked an 18-yard field goal and three extra points. More than 41 million people watched the broadcast on ABC and 32,183 showed up at Jeppesen Field, a converted high school stadium in Houston. Players on the Oilers earned $800 each for the victory.

The game was typical of the high-risk, exciting brand of football the AFL showcased. While NFL games were often ball control affairs emphasizing the running game, the AFL aired it out, throwing downfield play after play, taking chance after chance. In the NFL championship game, played five days before the AFL game, the Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers passed 55 times for a total of 382 yards. The Oilers and Chargers combined for 73 passes and 472 yards. “Our goal was to score a lot of points, open up the game, and make it more viewable,” Blanda says.

Blanda threw for more touchdowns than he had during his NFL career in each of the seven seasons he was an AFL starter, including a high of 36 in 1961. He also threw 42 interceptions in 1962, which remains a record. "We took a lot of chances and threw a lot of interceptions," he says.

Former NFL executive Gil Brandt notes that for fans, even an unsuccessful deep pass play is more exciting than a run. Responsible for shepherding the NFL expansion Dallas Cowboys through their first season in 1960 as the team’s vice president for player personnel, Brandt, like others, figured the new league would soon fold, as other NFL challengers had. “They started from the back of nowhere. I didn’t think they ever would survive,” he says. “They did and all of the teams are still in operation. They’ve all done extremely well.”

The game and the entire 1960 season were vindication for the “Foolish Club.” That’s what the eight original AFL team owners called themselves because they were crazy enough to take on the firmly entrenched NFL. Among them were Texas millionaires Lamar Hunt and Bud Adams Jr., who had been refused entry into the NFL in 1959. Over the previous four decades other upstarts, including the All American Conference, had challenged the NFL. None were successful.

Perhaps the most lasting influence of the AFL is the offense conceived by Sid Gillman, the innovative Chargers’ coach, that used the passing game to set up the run, in contrast to the way football had been played for years. The descendants of Gillman’s coaching tree, including Bill Walsh, Al Davis, Chuck Noll, and Mike Holmgren, have won 20 Super Bowls combined.

The league’s legacy also can be seen in many of the innovations adopted by the NFL. The AFL put names on the back of players’ jerseys, made the scoreboard clock official (time had been kept on the field), offered the two-point conversion, and recruited African-American players, unlike some NFL teams. (The NFL’s Washington Redskins didn’t have a single black player the first year of AFL play and would not integrate until pressure from the federal government and commissioner Pete Rozelle forced team owner George Preston Marshall to trade for running back Bobby Mitchell) The AFL also played the first Thanksgiving Day game, an NFL tradition.

Blanda was typical of the so-called “NFL rejects” in the early AFL. He had retired before the 1959 NFL season after tiring of the Chicago Bears’ tight-fisted owner George Halas and was working as a trucking company sales manager. It turned out he had a few good years left, playing for the Oilers and then the Oakland Raiders. He retired in 1975 at age 48 after playing 26 seasons, more than anyone in history.

The New York Titans’ Don Maynard, another star who went on, like Blanda, to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was a castoff from the New York Giants. Len Dawson languished five years in the NFL, starting two games, then became a superstar and future Hall of Famer with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Others, like Charlie Hennigan, who was coaching a Louisiana high school team and teaching biology when the Oilers offered a tryout, never had a shot in the established league. He’d played at tiny Northwestern State College in his native Louisiana and was undrafted by the NFL. He signed with the Oilers in 1960 for a $250 bonus and a $7,500 salary. “I was so happy,” recalls Hennigan, 74.”I was going to be making as much as the principal.”

He kept a pay stub from his $270.62-a-month teaching job in his helmet as a reminder of what he’d go back to if he failed. He didn’t. Hennigan may be the most prolific receiver not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In 1961, he set a single season record for reception yards that stood until 1995. In 1964, he became the second receiver to catch more than 100 passes in a season with 101, a record that lasted until 1992.

Blanda points out there were only 12 NFL teams with 33 players on a squad when the AFL began, meaning there were a lot of good athletes available. “I know the NFL people thought we were not much better than a junior college team,” Blanda says.”But we had a lot of great players in our league.”

By the middle of the 1960s, the NFL was luring away as many players from the AFL as the AFL was from the NFL. The bidding war for players, which began when the AFL was formed (Brandt recalls the price for free agents went from $5,500 to $7,500 the first year and kept climbing) reached a peak in 1965 when the New York Jets signed Alabama quarterback Joe Namath to a three-year, $427,000 contract, the biggest deal ever for an athlete in a team sport.

That year, NBC signed a five-year, $36 million television deal with the AFL, far more than CBS was paying the NFL. The NFL responded by ordering CBS not to give AFL scores during telecasts. A year later, a gentlemen’s agreement between the leagues not to sign each other’s players was shattered when the New York Giants enticed star kicker Pete Gogolak from the Bills for a three-year, $96,000 contract. A bidding war ensued with several established NFL stars signing with the AFL.

Finally, the two leagues announced a merger in the summer of 1966. They would play the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game (the term “Super Bowl” was coined later) after the 1966 season. The NFL’s Green Bay Packers won the first two matchups, then the New York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs grabbed the next two, announcing loudly that the AFL was the NFL’s equal.

The rivalry hasn’t waned for Blanda and Hennigan, even though they draw NFL pension checks. They’re still AFL guys at heart.

“We were a better show than the NFL was,” Hennigan says. “They didn’t like us and they still don’t like us. And I don’t like them.”


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Comments (11)

As an Englishman, I am a trifle confused by the name American Football Leagues, as the ball is only rarely kiched by foot and then for a field goal; the rest opf the time it is passed by hand. In English football, touching the ball by hand is against the rules, except for the goalkeeper.In Rugby football, fet and hands are used but forward passes are against the rules. Strange.

Posted by American Football on July 3,2011 | 02:07 AM

I took to the AFL because the league gave us a New England team, the Boston Patriots. Prior to 1960 the New Giants were our "home" team. Some older New Englanders remain Giants fans.

The wide open brand of football made the AFL exciting. One had to love the emphasis on offense. The AFL did well by acquiring a set of great quarterbacks like Dawson, Hadl, Kemp, Blanda and Parelli. Later Joe Namath gave the league credibility and a victory in Super Bowl III.

Posted by P. W. Nalbandian on October 22,2010 | 09:58 PM

Fine article, sorry it took me so long to find it. My favorite part is the quote by Charlie Hennigan: "They [the NFL] didn't like us and they still don't like us. And I don't like them." That goes for tens of thousands of American Football League fans, to this day! For more on the AFL, see http://www.remembertheafl.com

Posted by Ange Conigliuo on May 28,2010 | 05:22 PM

i remember the 1st game i went to as a scout, bills 28 texans 45, cold, windy, & snow on the ground. our family saw a no. of games up until 1964. i was lucky enough to see the bills beat the chargers for the title in 1965, it took me a long time to find the programs for these games, but i was able to re-buy them, & add to my memories of the AFL. ron cap, who used to live in dunkirk, aka cappies diner.

Posted by ron on April 25,2010 | 02:00 PM

Frank Youell Field, I also knew it well. As a kid, I went to FY field to see the Raiders play the Bills, with Jack Kemp at QB. The coliseum was being built at the time. I believe it was 1964. I went to a couple of games there. Cotton Davidson and Tom Flores QBing. Let us not forget Hewitt Dixon.

Posted by Ken Macumber on February 5,2010 | 03:15 PM

I always pulled for the underdog, so the AFL called me early. I rember the Denver Broncos beating the Detroit Lions in an exhibition game--it might as well have been the Super Bowl. And Super Bowl III was almost too much to absorb. The following season, the Jets (I was living in Connecticut at the time, and was a huge Titans/Jets fan)beat the hated Giants in a pre-season game. Words couldn't describe the happiness, not to mention how absolutely insufferable I was around Giant fans. And who could forget the Heidi game?

Posted by Jimmy Amspacher on February 5,2010 | 01:39 PM

As an Englishman, I am a trifle confused by the name American football, as the ball is only rarely kiched by foot and then for a field goal; the rest opf the time it is passed by hand. In English football, touching the ball by hand is against the rules, except for the goalkeeper.In Rugby football, fet and hands are used but forward passes are against the rules. Strange.

Posted by Bernard Roberts on February 4,2010 | 04:42 PM

Very interesting article about the past.
However,regarding the All america Conference.('46 thru 49)
The NFL caused the demise of the AAC.They took the three best teams,The San Francisco 49ers,the Cleveland Browns,and the Baltimore Colts into the NFL.Thereby causing the break up of the rest of the AAC.

Posted by Ray on February 4,2010 | 02:26 PM

Great article!
But, The Detroit Lions played their first annual Thanksgiving Day game in 1934. (26 years before the AFL was born).

Posted by Phil on February 4,2010 | 01:18 PM

The summer of 1960, My Mom and Dad took me up to bear mt. ny .As we walked around my dad noticed a bunch of guys playing football . It was unusual for the summertime.Any way it turned out to be training camp for the ny. titans. I met coach Sammy Baugh, Don Maynard, and others. Quite a thrill I say the least. Thank You.

Posted by Paul G Osmers on January 26,2010 | 10:31 PM

Ah yes, I remember it well; I was only a freshman in high school at the time. If the AFL was the "foolish club," then the Oakland Raiders were the most foolish of all. Originally called the Oakland Senors, they were conceived of at the last moment and almost died in infancy. They went something like 0-18-1 at the beginning and were on the verge of going down and out. Then a young coach, Al Davis, was hired prior to the 1963 season, and things turned around dramatically. A friend invited me to go to their first exhibition game at old and small Frank Youell Field in Oakland, a junior college field, and the Raiders beat the Patriots that day, about 35-14. It was such a fun, exciting game to watch with, of course, a completely unexpected outcome--Cotton Davidson throwing touchdowns to Art Powell. It seemed like we were only about fifteen yards from the field. Four years later the Raiders were in the super bowl.

Posted by paul reimers on January 16,2010 | 11:17 AM



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The Original AFL Teams

• Los Angeles Chargers (moved to San Diego)
• New York Titans (later renamed the Jets)
• Boston Patriots
• Denver Broncos
• Oakland Raiders
• Dallas Texans (later became the Kansas City Chiefs)
• Buffalo Bills
• Houston Oilers

The two expansion teams:
• Cincinnati Bengals
• Miami Dolphins

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