Orange/Newark Tornadoes

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Orange-Newark Tornadoes
Founded 1887
Suspended 1942–1962
Folded 1971
Based in Orange, New Jersey
Newark, New Jersey, United States
Orlando, Florida (1966–1969)
League Independent (1887–1928, 1931–1935)
National Football League (1929–1930)
American Association (1936–1948)
Atlantic Coast Football League (1963–1964, 1970–1971)
Continental Football League (1965–1969)
Team history Orange Athletic Club (1887–1928)
Orange Tornadoes (1929, 1931–1936)
Newark Tornadoes (1930, 1937–1938)
Newark Bears (1939–1941, 1963–1965)
Orlando Panthers (1966–1969)
Team colors Navy, Orange, White               
Head coaches Jack Depler (1929)
Jack Fish, Al McGall, Andy Salata (1930)
Owner(s) Edwin Simandl (1929–1938)
George Halas (1939–1941)
Sol Rosen (1965–1971)
Home field(s) East Orange Oval (1887–???)
East Orange Stadium (???–1925)
Knights of Columbus Stadium (1926–1929, 1931–1936)
Newark Schools Stadium (1930, 1937–65)
Newark Velodrome (1930)
Citrus Bowl (1966–1969)

The Orange Tornadoes and Newark Tornadoes were two manifestations of a long-lived professional American football franchise that existed in some form from 1887 to 1930 and from 1963 to 1971, having played in the National Football League from 1929 to 1930, the American Association from 1936 to 1941, the Atlantic Coast Football League from 1963 to 1964 and 1970 to 1971, and the Continental Football League from 1965 to 1969. The team was based for most of its history in Orange, New Jersey, with many of its later years in Newark. Its last five years of existence were as the Orlando Panthers, when the team was based in Orlando, Florida. The franchise was sold back to the NFL in October 1930. The team had four head coaches in its two years in the NFL – Jack Depler in Orange, and Jack Fish, Al McGall and Andy Salata in Newark.

History

Early years

The Orange Tornadoes can trace their roots back to the Orange Athletic Club. The Orange A.C. was originally an amateur football team that began play in 1887. The team's first ever game was a 36–0 loss to Seton Hall University football team. By the 1890s the Orange became a semi-pro team. In 1892, the team practiced under electric lights at night to prepare for an October 8 game against Rutgers College. The Orange A. C. would go on to win that game 22–10. In 1893, the team went on to win the mythical American Football Union Championship, after posting an 8–2 record. In 1902 the Orange A. C. played against Philadelphia Phillies and the Philadelphia Athletics of the first National Football League. The team also played in World Series of Football in that year, at Madison Square Garden. These games were the first indoor football games. In 1902 Orange lost to All-Syracuse team, 36–0. However the team returned to the World Series of Football in 1903 where they played the Watertown Red & Black and, the eventual champion, the Franklin Athletic Club. Orange lost to Watertown, 11–0, and to Franklin, 12–0. However they did manage to defeat the Oreo Athletic Club of Asbury Park, 22–0, during the 1903 contest.

Pre-NFL

The Orange team became an established independent pro team from 1919 until 1928, under the nickname the Orange AC Golden Tornadoes. During this time, Orange defeated the New York Brickley Giants of the NFL. They also played pre-NFL versions of the Frankford Yellow Jackets and the Staten Island Stapletons. They also played against the Atlantic City Roses and the Millville Big Blue, two of the top independent teams of the 1920s. By 1928, Orange held the New York Giants and Frankford Yellow Jackets to close scores. On September 16, 1928 Orange held the 1927 NFL Champion New York Giants to just a 7–0 victory. While a week earlier the NFL's previous champions, the Frankford Yellow Jackets, were held to a 12–0 victory. Orange showed that their team could compete in the NFL.

1929 season

File:Orange AC 1894.jpg
Orange Athletic Club in 1894. This team evolved into the Orange Tornadoes of the NFL.

In 1929 Ole Haugsrud, the owner of Duluth Eskimos, sold his defunct franchise rights to Piggy Simandl, a wholesale meat salesman and sports promoter from Orange, who named his franchise the Orange Tornadoes. The Tornadoes played their home games at Knights of Columbus Stadium. The first game for the new team was a scoreless tie against the New York Giants on September 29, 1929. A week later the team recorded their first NFL win by defeating the Boston Bulldogs 7–0. The victory came off a short George Pease pass to Paul Longua who ran 60 yards for a touchdown. However the following week, Orange experienced its first NFL loss during a 7–0 defeat to the 1928 NFL Champions, the Providence Steamroller. The team regrouped on October 19, 1929, and the Tornandoes held the Frankford Yellow Jackets to a 6–6 tie at Frankford Stadium. A week later the team rallied from a 13–0 deficit to defeat the Boston Bulldogs, 19–13.

On October 29, 1929, the Bulldogs and Tornadoes met again to play, in Pottsville, Pennsylvania. Prior to 1929, the Bulldogs played as the Pottsville Maroons and the teams played for their still loyal fans at the Maroons' Minersville Park. This time however, the Tornadoes lost 6–0 by way of a 4-yard touchdown run from Boston's Tony Latone. On October 3, the Tornadoes held the Staten Island Stapletons to a scoreless tie at Thompson Stadium. During that game the Stapletons were within scoring distance three times, but to no avail. Meanwhile, the Tornadoes only penetrated the Staten Island 20-yard line once.

The Orange then lost a rematch against the New York Giants, 22–0, a week later. But after a scoreless tie against Frankford, the Orange defeated the Staten Island Stapletons 3–0, due to a Felix McCormick field goal. However the next game, against the Chicago Cardinals, resulted in a 26–0 Tornadoes loss. The Cardinals, led by Ernie Nevers, put up 20 points in the second quarter of the game. The Tornadoes then ended their 1929 season with a 10–0 loss to Frankford. They finished with a 3–5–4 record, scoring 35 points, while giving up 80.

1930

File:Newark Tornadoes.png
1930 Newark Tornadoes logo

The team's fortune in the NFL changed for the worse after it moved to Newark in 1930. During the team's time in Newark, it played its home games at Newark Schools Stadium. Head coach Jack Depler defected to buy the Dayton Triangles, moving that team to Brooklyn and transforming that team into the Brooklyn Dodgers. He took most of the members of the 1929 Tornadoes with him. Meanwhile, the Tornadoes went through three coaches during the 1930 season, and the team's only victory during the 1930 season was against the Frankford Yellow Jackets.

The last game for the Newark Tornadoes was against the New York Giants, a 34–7 loss on October 29, 1930. The franchise ended league play after the 1930 season and was sold back to the NFL. The league ordered the franchise sold to the highest bidder prior to the 1931 season, but there were no takers and the team took the field as the “Cleveland Indians” under league ownership.

In 1932, a Boston-based group won a new NFL franchise and was awarded the remains of the failed Newark organization. The new team would be named the Boston Braves, now the Washington Redskins. However, the NFL does not consider the Redskins to be a continuation of the Tornadoes, just as it does not consider the Tornadoes to be a continuation of the Duluth Eskimoes.

The Tornadoes and Bears in the American Association

Though the NFL franchise had moved to Newark, owner Edwin Simandl had kept a barebones organization back in Orange, just in case the NFL Tornadoes failed. When they did, he moved as many players as he could from the Newark squad back to Orange. The minor league Tornadoes played in various leagues, including the American Association, of which it was a charter member. The Orange Tornadoes moved back to Newark in 1937 and were eventually bought by the Chicago Bears. Playing under the name Newark Bears (a name previously used by the Newark Bears of the 1926 American Football League), the team played in the AA through 1941.

The team did not return after World War II; instead, George Halas took what was left of the team and split it into the Newark Bombers and the Akron Bears. The Bloomfield Cardinals replaced both teams in 1947. The NFL severed ties with all minor league teams in 1948.

The Bears revived in the ACFL and Continental League

The Newark Bears would return in 1963, when the Atlantic Coast Football League (a revival of sorts of the AA) revived the Newark Bears for two seasons. This version of the Bears was owned by Sol Rosen. In 1965, the team applied to the American Football League to join that league, but were turned down (as the New York metropolitan area already had both the Jets and NFL's Giants, both of which counted North Jersey as their market and would eventually move to New Jersey in later years), and instead joined the upstart Continental Football League, where it played one season in 1965 before moving to Orlando, Florida, acquiring an existing franchise in the Southern Professional Football League that had been in place since 1962,[1] and becoming the Orlando Panthers. The Panthers played in the ContFL from 1966 to the league's dissolution in 1969. As the Panthers, and led by quarterback Don Jonas, the team won two league titles and played in a third. In 1966, the team lost the championship to the Philadelphia Bulldogs in sudden-death overtime, 20–17. In 1967, the Panthers won the title with a 38–14 win over the Orange County Ramblers. In 1968, they repeated the feat by defeating the Ramblers 30–23, though they had to enter the game by winning a playoff with the Indianapolis Capitols (which Orlando won 28–14). In 1969, however, Orlando and Indianapolis rematched in the semifinals, with the Capitols prevailing 27–7. When the Continental Football League folded, the Bears returned to the ACFL, playing two more seasons in 1970 and 1971. During the 1970 season, the Panthers had on their roster a holder named Patricia Palinkas, the first woman to play on a men's professional football team.[2][3] Palinkas originally served as holder for her husband, Steve Palinkas, but Steve Palinkas was cut prior to the regular season while Patricia made the team.[4] The Panthers folded in 1971 along with most of the rest of the ACFL.

Meanwhile, in New Jersey, the ACFL moved the former Charleston Rockets franchise to Newark in 1969, becoming the "Jersey Jays." The Jays played from 1969 to 1971.

Uniforms

In 1929, Orange experimented with using letters instead of numbers on player jerseys.

Season-by-season

Year W L T Finish Coach
Orange Tornadoes 1929 3 5 4 6th, NFL Jack Depler
Newark Tornadoes 1930 1 10 1 11th, NFL Jack Fish, Al McGall, Andy Salata
Orange Tornadoes 1936 4 4 0 5th, AA
Newark Tornadoes 1937 6 1 3 T-1st, AA
Newark Tornadoes 1938 2 5 0 6th, AA
Newark Bears 1939 6 2 1 AA Champions
Newark Bears 1940 5 5 1 T-4th, AA
Newark Bears 1941 3 6 0 5th, AA
Newark Bears 1963 11 1 0 1st, ACFL Champions
Newark Bears 1964 12 1 1 1st, ACFL Southern, lost final
Newark Bears 1965 5 9 0 5th, CFL Atlantic
Orlando Panthers 1966 12 2 0 2nd, CFL
Orlando Panthers 1967 11 3 0 CFL Champions
Orlando Panthers 1968 10 2 0 CFL Champions
Orlando Panthers 1969 10 2 0 Lost in CFL semifinals
  • A complete game-by-game record to 1937 can be found here.

References

  1. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=q4gfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=lcsEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2416,5840811&dq=continental-football-league&hl=en
  2. Associated Press (1970-08-13). "Neptunes worry how to tackle 'holder'. Retrieved 2010-12-25.
  3. http://www.profootballresearchers.org/Coffin_Corner/22-01-837.pdf
  4. Associated Press (1970-09-04). "First woman to earn place on pro grid team is also suspended." Retrieved 2010-12-25.

Sources