The Hawaiians

From SportsPaper Wiki
The Hawaiians
First Season
1974
Team History
The Hawaiians (1974-75)
Conference/Division
World Football League (1974-75)
  • Western Division (1974-75)
Venue
Aloha Stadium (1975)
Honolulu Stadium (1974-75)
Key People
Players • Head Coaches • Executives


The Hawaiians were a professional American football team based in Honolulu, Hawaii that played in the World Football League. They played two seasons, 1974 and 1975. Their records were 9–11 in 1974 and 4–7–1 in 1975. Their home stadium was Honolulu Stadium in 1974 and Aloha Stadium in 1975. The team ceased operations when the WFL folded.

Publications

Programs by season

1970s

Date Opponent Venue
1974
July 10 at Florida Blazers Orlando Stadium
July 17 at Southern California Sun Anaheim Stadium
July 21 vs. Detroit Wheels Honolulu Stadium
August 14 at Birmingham Americans Legion Field
September 1 vs. Houston Texans Honolulu Stadium
September 18 vs. New York Stars Honolulu Stadium
October 2 vs. Birmingham Americans Honolulu Stadium
October 30 vs. Memphis Southmen Honolulu Stadium
November 21 at Southern California Sun Anaheim Stadium
1975
August 2 at Philadelphia Bell Franklin Field
August 23 vs. Chicago Winds Honolulu Stadium
September 28 at Shreveport Steamer State Fair Stadium

Media guides and yearbooks

Media guides

1970s 1974 • 1975
Franchise.png Franchises Portal


World Football League
1974 Teams Birmingham Americans • New York Stars/Charlotte Hornets • Chicago Fire • Detroit Wheels • Florida Blazers • The Hawaiians • Jacksonville Sharks • Memphis Southmen • Philadelphia Bell • Portland Storm • Houston Texans / Shreveport Steamer • Southern California Sun
1975 Teams Birmingham Vulcans • Charlotte Hornets • Chicago Winds • The Hawaiians • Jacksonville Express • Memphis Southmen • Philadelphia Bell • Portland Thunder • San Antonio Wings • Shreveport Steamer • Southern California Sun
Venues Alamo Stadium • Aloha Stadium • American Legion Memorial Stadium • Anaheim Stadium • Astrodome • Civic Stadium • Downing Stadium • Franklin Field • Gator Bowl • Independence Stadium • Legion Field • Memphis Memorial Stadium • Rynearson Stadium • Soldier Field
Related Gary Davidson • 1974 WFL season • 1975 WFL season