Richmond Roughriders Sign Wide Receiver Lonnie Outlaw

The Richmond Roughriders have announced the signing of wide receiver Lonnie Outlaw. He recently played in the Arena Football League with the Philadelphia Soul and the Cleveland Gladiators.

“Outlaw will be a true asset to our already great receiving core. The combination of his height, speed, and AFL experience will create matchup problems all season,” Richmond Roughriders Owner/General Manager Gregg Fornario said, per the team’s Facebook post.

The Gladiators recently suspended operations until the 2020 season due to renovations going on during the 2018 and 2019 seasons.

Richmond is one of 12 teams that will play in the inaugural season of the American Arena League. The league is a merge of the Arena Pro Football and the Can-Am Indoor Football League. Their season kicks off on March 17 and the title game will be played on Saturday, June 30.

All-Arena/Indoor Football Playoff Top Four

The NCAA just announced their four teams for the College Football Playoff. The Playoff will begin on Jan. 1 with Oklahoma and Georgia facing off in the Rose Bowl at 5:15 p.m. ET, followed by the Clemson Tigers facing off against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the Sugar Bowl at 8:45 p.m. ET.

That got us thinking. If there were a playoff for all of the indoor and arena football leagues, who would be in the top four?

4. Jacksonville Sharks

The Sharks left the Arena Football League to join the National Arena League in 2016. They played in the AFL from their inaugural season in 2010 until 2016. In their first season in the NAL, they lost just once and won the inaugural NAL title.

Having success in two leagues is a very interesting thing. That is the big reason why they would be in the top four. However, there are three teams still better than them.

3. Sioux Falls Storm

Up until last season, Sioux Falls had ran the Indoor Football League for most of the league’s existence. They had won seven consecutive United Bowl titles before the Arizona Rattlers snapped that streak last July. Still, a streak such as that deserves a spot in the top four.

2. Philadelphia Soul

Everyone will see this and talk about how the Soul run the league because the league is currently at five teams. It wouldn’t matter if there were two teams in the AFL. Philadelphia has been the team to beat over the last two seasons.

They became the first team since Arizona from 2012-14 to win consecutive ArenaBowl titles. They even defeated the Rattlers in 2016 to win ArenaBowl XXIX, their second in franchise history.

Still, they can’t beat out the team in the desert as #1.

1. Arizona Rattlers

Arizona was one of the most successful franchises in AFL history, winning five ArenaBowl titles. Had they not turned the ball over three times so early in ArenaBowl XXIX, they would’ve had their sixth title.

That offseason, like the Sharks, they left the AFL for another league. Arizona took their talents to the IFL. After an 0-2 start, the Rattlers picked it up and went on to end Sioux Falls’ reign, winning United Bowl IX.

While they did the same thing Jacksonville did in winning a title in another league, they did against more talented teams, including stopping who everyone thought was the unstoppable. That’s why they would be the top team in an all-arena/indoor football playoff.

St. Louis Should Bring in Arena Football League Team

After the addition of Albany, NY to the Arena Football League was announced yesterday, bringing the league count to six for the 2018 season and most importantly no teams moving or folding after a couple story filled off seasons. It’s natural to assume who is next?

There are reports that Newark, NJ is on the way shortly, which would make seven teams total. To make the league even stronger, an eighth city is needed, which may lead to a return of conference play. Given if that did happen, it would likely not start until the 2019 season considering five of the possible eight teams being in their first or second season of existing, splitting those teams up could lead to teams with poor records getting into a conference title game.

On Jan. 4, 2016, the NFL’s St. Louis Rams at the time, filed for relocation. A move starting a path to move the Rams back to Los Angeles, CA. So, the city of St. Louis lost their football team.

Arena Football League: It’s time to strike while the iron is hot. St. Louis deserves to see football again. It is home to one of the biggest cities in America with a population over 300,000 and is an exciting sports city.

The city hosts major sports leagues such as Major League Baseball (Cardinals) and the National Hockey League (Blues). St. Louis is also home to a major university, Saint Louis University. The Billikens also have a 10,000 seat arena.

The city of St. Louis could be a strong win-win situation to host an Arena Football team. If St. Louis were to get a team, it’s only a two hour flight to Philadelphia, home of the back to back defending champs, the Philadelphia Soul.

Phialdelphia’s ownership group lead the way to Albany returning to the AFL.  St. Louis getting a team would still make it easy for AFL teams to get around, but at the same time it would also open the door to more expansion towards the middle of the country.

This could open the door to Arena Football returning to football hungry states such as Texas. From St. Louis, it would only be a 90 minute flight to head to Dallas. Dallas had a team called the Dallas Desperados, who played seven seasons in the AFL from 2002- 2008.

The team was owned by the man that runs the Dallas Cowboys, Jerry Jones. The AFL most recently had a team in San Antonio TX. The San Antonio Talons played from 2012-2014. So, giving a team to St. Louis could also lead the way to bringing back football to fans all over the area in the coming years.

If the the AFL brought back football to the people of St. Louis it would help them and the Arena Football League grow. Now they just have to make it happen.

The Spurs and Arena Football: A Missed Opportunity?

Here we go again.

The Washington Wizards have two Arena Football League franchises- the Washington Wizards and the Baltimore Brigade. As the AFL continues to go after other NBA owners, this is important for the AFL fans in San Antonio, TX, who have been waiting and watching with baited breath for the return of their San Antonio Talons a popular team that folded after the league tried selling to several groups but ultimately failed. One of those groups? The San Antonio Spurs.

As the third anniversary of the Talons shutting down approaches this Friday, it’s hard not to look at the fact the Spurs have let so many opportunities get away, not to mention the struggles SS&E has had since.

In Dec. 2013, Talons wide receiver Robert Quiroga, along with Talons chief operating officer Keith Recine, head coach Lee Johnson, and others set up a meeting with Spurs Sports And Entertainment. Takeaways from that meeting indicated that the Spurs were sold on the idea of owning the team or any franchise in the Arena Football League.

So they spoke with then AFL commissioner Jerry Kurz for months about taking the franchise over. Many things were discussed, including the possibility of having the team play in Austin for a season due to renovations to the AT&T Center.

Then in Aug. 2014, the Spurs and the AFL went to the negotiating table to turn the franchise over to the Spurs. The Spurs were very much down with taking over the team, except there was one problem.

As stated above, the AT&T Center and the Freeman Coliseum, the two arenas that the Spurs own and operate, were set to undergo renovations in the summer of 2015- during the Arena Football League season. So the Spurs had to wait until the 2016 season to get a team.

For months, it looked like that was the case. Many sources confirmed that the Spurs had a franchise and that the team was going to be announced at the Spurs home opener on Oct. 30 against the Brooklyn Nets.

But three hours before tipoff, the league issued the most infamous press release in its 30 year history, stating that there would be no expansion in 2016. It later turned out that San Antonio had been approved by the league, but the board of directors wanted to go a year with no expansion to make sure things would go right.

Considering how the Las Vegas Outlaws were rushed into playing the 2015 season, it seemed like a smart move, even though the owners voted to have the Spurs team play in the 2016 season according to two sources. Were the people of San Antonio disappointed? Of course, but did that mean the Spurs were done with exploring the AFL? Not at all. Fans knew that there would be more opportunities and they would be on the lookout.

A month and a half after the Oct. 30 debacle, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, then the owners of the LA KISS, came to San Antonio to sing the national anthem before a Spurs 109-87 win over the Los Angeles Lakers. This was a great chance for the Spurs to talk to two guys who actually owned a team. According to team president Joe Windham, Gene and Paul never once brought up arena football.

In Jan. 2016, the Portland Thunder lost its ownership and was taken over by the league. I immediately jumped to the idea that the Spurs should take over the team and move it to San Antonio. All season long, I had said this would be the smartest move, considering all SS&E teams have been relocated prior to playing in San Antonio (except for San Antonio FC, which was an expansion franchise two years ago).

However, the team (renamed the Portland Steel for legal issues) quietly folded after no ownership group bought the team and apparently no attempt by the Spurs to step up and relocate it to San Antonio. It’s a shame because it looked to be an ideal Spurs franchise relocation scenario.

The Steel were last in the AFL in attendance. One of their home games was moved to LA, and the one owner who everyone looked at as the obvious target, Portland Trailblazers owner Paul Allen, “pretty much” decided that he wasn’t going to buy the Steel. San Antonio buying the Steel was even mentioned by someone who covers the Steel for a Pacific Northwest blog as a quiet (unlikely, but quiet) possibility.

Unfortunately, that didn’t come to fruition either because the Spurs would rather an expansion franchise or because the league wanted to keep it in Portland. Regardless, Portland is gone.

They weren’t the only team the Spurs could have snagged.

The Jacksonville Sharks had been one of the AFL’s model franchises since it entered in 2010, making the playoffs five times in six seasons. However in recent years, the team has had its fair share of problems. Their owner Jeffery Bouchy had made his standard for success hosting playoff games at Sea Best Field rather than winning the ArenaBowl in recent years.

That’s because Bouchy himself admitted in Aug. 2015 that the Sharks had only been profitable for just two seasons in franchise history. In fact, they hadn’t had a season in which they were profitable since winning ArenaBowl XXIV in 2011.

Sure, they have a great fan base, but at the end of the day if you’re struggling financially, you have to do what you have to do. So it felt like a great chance for the Spurs to swoop (the name of the Talons mascot, no pun intended) in and relocate the Sharks. Once again, they failed to take advantage. It wasn’t because the league stated that the team would stay in Jacksonville, but that the Sharks announced that 2017 ticket memberships were being sold.

A few months later, Bouchy announced that he would be moving the Sharks to the National Arena League.

Sometimes it wasn’t a matter of relocating a team, but maybe holding a game as a pilot episode. The Philadelphia Soul knew that because of the DNC being in the Wells Fargo Center last summer that there was no way they could host the playoffs in their normal venue. An idea was floated that the Spurs host the Soul’s first playoff game as a test game for the AT&T Center. Due of the Olympics, the WNBA’s San Antonio Stars would not be playing a home game and thus the venue would be available.

There was some speculation that the Washington Wizards, now owners of the Washington Valor, would do the same thing given the proximity to Philadelphia. Instead, the Soul announced that their first round game, as well as the conference championship, would be played at the PPL Center in Allentown, PA.

The same scenario played out with the LA KISS. Due to a circus being booked at the Honda Center, LA had to look at alternative venues. Why not the AT&T Center? After all, Lakers fans used to show up in large numbers when their team came to town to face the Spurs.

The same thing happened during the KISS’ only trip to San Antonio, in which many members of KISS Army invaded the Alamodome to watch LA’s 41-38 upset victory. But the decision was made to play in San Diego instead, where the KISS lost 56-52.

You can’t help but see the struggles SS&E has had since failing to initially purchase the Talons in 2014 and not think something is involved. The team SS&E moved over to the Freeman for the 2014 season.

The San Antonio Stars made the playoffs in 2014, while the Spurs negotiated for the Talons. Not only have the Stars not returned to the playoffs since, but attendance has been dismal since returning to the AT&T Center, averaging about 6,300 a game.

The future is bright though with Kelsey Plum leading the franchise. San Antonio FC, the soccer team SS&E started up recently, has been a disaster from day one. Although they made the playoffs this year, attendance has been inconsistent, with only two sellouts in their inaugural season. Interestingly enough, SAFCs attendance through two seasons at Toyota Field is actually worse than the Talons first two seasons at the Alamodome.

MLS has also never mentioned San Antonio for expansion in any way shape or form since the team arrived. It really shouldn’t be noted, but it’s worth mentioning that the Spurs won their fifth NBA title in June 2014, two months before the Spurs and the AFL began negotiations. The Spurs haven’t been back to the NBA Finals since. It’s also worth mentioning the day after the Talons shut down, the Spurs lost a preseason game to Alba Berlin.

There are three AFL teams with NBA ownership: The Cleveland Gladiators, the Washington Valor, and the Baltimore Brigade. The Spurs and Cavs had talks before about starting a team in the AFL. Did Wizards owner Ted Leonsis have any talks with the Spurs this past season? Did Spurs officials attend games in DC and Baltimore this year? These are all questions that fans here have, and have been wanting answered for some time now.

Questions like these are also starting to become annoying. Unfortunately, Spurs Sports & Entertainment will continue to hear them until they come out and acknowledge it. Like Principal Seymour said, “You can’t hide forever, I’m a very patient man. I once waited an hour and a half for a haircut!”