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Origin of the Detroit Lions-The Portsmouth...

On September 14, 1930 - The Portsmouth Spartans played their first NFL game on this date. The Spartans...

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FOOTBALL TEAM | Detroit Lions

"Origin of the Detroit Lions-The Portsmouth Spartans Story"

Last updated 📅 2024-06-11

On September 14, 1930 - The Portsmouth Spartans played their first NFL game on this date. The Spartans defeated the Newark Tornadoes in their first game by the final score of 13-6. The Portsmouth Eleven ended the 1930 season with a record of 5-6-3, but they had a core of players they could build upon, which became evident two years later.

The 1932 season ended with the Spartans and the Chicago Bears finishing with identical records at 6-1-4, and previously (since 1920), the League's champion was determined by the team with the best record. The NFL decided that a final game to determine a Champ would be played in a unique Chicago at Wrigley Field on December 18, 1932. This first postseason game in NFL history had some massive twists and turns to make it quite a remarkable story, even besides the fact that a game was going to be played to determine an NFL Champion. The first odd occurrence was that Spartans star Earl "Dutch" Clark could not play in the game because he had to work. While that may sound wild to us today, the fact was that professional players of that era did not make enough to make a living all year long. Most had to take off-season jobs to make ends meet, even the superstars like Dutch Clark, who worked as the Head Basketball Coach at Colorado College. His hoops team had a game on December 18, and Dutch couldn't get off work to make the football game in Chicago. The second crazy thing that happened was that due to a freak late-fall blizzard in Chicago, the game had to be moved inside the Chicago Stadium because Wrigley was covered with deep snow and frozen with dangerous sub-zero temperatures.

The playing field had to be modified to play inside, so the game was played on a field only 80 yards long and some 30 yards narrower than the normal width the teams played on all season. The last item surrounding the game happened on the contest's only touchdown. Bronko Nagurski threw a scoring jump pass to Red Grange, but the Spartans argued that Nagurski did not meet the requirement of legal forward passes in those days of being 5 yards or more behind the line. The play stood, and the Bears won the NFL title with a score of 9-0. The Spartans franchise would become the Lions in 1933 when they moved from Portsmouth, Ohio, to Detroit, Michigan, after a Detroit radio businessman, George A. Richards, purchased the rights to the team for $8000.

This was a hefty sum at the time, but Portsmouth had, after all, just recently played for a somewhat impromptu first NFL Championship game against the Chicago Bears, shorthanded of their star player. The Motor City was a risky place to put the team at this point, as three previous franchises had failed there, but Richards knew the city needed a winner and took the chance. It was well worth his risk as the newly named Detroit Lions team won the NFL Title in 1935 and later in the 1952, 1953, and 1957 seasons.

Richards took another chance with his football franchise in 1934 when he scheduled a game on Thanksgiving Day. However, it failed in other cities (save Dallas a few decades later), but the Turkey Day game in the Motor City was a huge success. Unfortunately, in 1940, Mr. Richards had to sell the franchise due to a declining health issue and a fine from the NFL for draft tampering, but his $8000 initial investment turned into a $225,000 sale of the Lions to retail magnate Fred Mandel. The Lions eventually were purchased by the descendants of Henry Ford and are owned by the family to this day.

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"Detroit Lions NFL Franchise History"

The Detroit Lions are a team steeped in tradition, their story dating back to 1930 when they first took the field as the Portsmouth Spartans in Portsmouth, Ohio. Led by the legendary coach Gus Dorais and featuring star players like Dutch Clark and Jim Steele, the Spartans quickly established themselves as a force to be reckoned with, winning the NFL Championship in just their second season.
In 1934, the team relocated to Detroit, Michigan, adopting the "Lions" name as a nod to the city's nickname, "Motor City." This began a long and passionate relationship between the team and its dedicated fanbase. The 1950s and 1960s witnessed the "Golden Age" of the Lions, a period defined by dominant players and thrilling victories. Quarterback Bobby Layne, nicknamed "The Madman," became a local icon with his flamboyant personality and on-field grit, leading the team to four NFL Championship appearances in six years, including winning the NFL championships in 1935, 1952, 1953, and 1957. The Lions' success began to wane in the late 1960s and 1970s, marked by inconsistency and playoff droughts. Despite flashes of brilliance with players like running back Barry Sanders and defensive end Chuck Long, the team struggled to recapture its championship glory...

FOOTBALL TEAM | Detroit Lions

"Bullet Bill Dudley Hall of Fame HB"

Born December 24, 1921, in Bluefield, Virginia  was the University of Virginia’s legendary halfback Bullet Bill Dudley. Some so-called experts thought Dudley was too small to play football in the collegiate ranks as he weighed in at 152 pounds with a 5’-10” frame per the NFF.
Virginia’s Coach, Frank Murray, decided to give Bill a chance to prove all of the other recruiters wrong. What Dudley did was to become the only player to win MVP honors in college,  the Armed Forces and professional levels...