1946 AAFC season: Difference between revisions
From SportsPaper Wiki
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
| Cleveland Stadium | | Cleveland Stadium | ||
|- | |- | ||
! rowspan=3| Week 2 | |||
| [ | | [[Los Angeles Dons vs. Brooklyn Dodgers (September 13, 1946)|September 13, 1946]] | ||
| [[Los Angeles Dons]] vs. [[Brooklyn Dodgers (AAFC)|Brooklyn Dodgers]] | | [[Los Angeles Dons]] vs. [[Brooklyn Dodgers (AAFC)|Brooklyn Dodgers]] | ||
| Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | | [[Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/football/aafc/seasons/1946/09-14_buf-ny.html September 14, 1946] | | [https://www.sportspaper.info/football/aafc/seasons/1946/09-14_buf-ny.html September 14, 1946] |
Revision as of 08:47, 13 September 2022
Preseason | n/a |
---|---|
Regular Season | September 18-December 11, 1946 |
Postseason | December 18, 1946 |
← n/a • other seasons • 1947 → |
The 1946 AAFC season was the first season of the All-America Football Conference, a new professional league established to challenge the market dominance of the established National Football League. The league included eight teams, broken up into Eastern and Western divisions, which played a 14-game official schedule, culminating in a league championship game. The Cleveland Browns defeated the New York Yankees in the title game, 14-9.
Publications
All-America Football Conference | |
---|---|
Teams | Baltimore Colts • Brooklyn-New York Yankees • Buffalo Bills • Chicago Hornets • Cleveland Browns • Los Angeles Dons • San Francisco 49ers |
Seasons | 1946 • 1947 • 1948 • 1949 |
Venues | Burdine Stadium • Civic Stadium • Ebbets Field • Kezar Stadium • Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum • Soldier Field • Yankee Stadium |
Related | League publications |