Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Fort Wayne FireHawks were a professional indoor football team based in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The team joined the Continental Indoor Football League as an expansion team during the 2010 season . The FireHawks were the fourth attempt at indoor football in Fort Wayne after the original Fort Wayne Freedom ( NIFL & UIF , 2003–06), Fort Wayne ...
The CIFL's 2010 game ball. The 2010 Continental Indoor Football League season was the league's fifth overall season. The regular season started on Saturday March 13 with the expansion Cincinnati Commandos defeating the Miami Valley Silverbacks 38-32, and ended with the 2010 CIFL Championship Game, on June 26, 2010, at the Cincinnati Gardens in Cincinnati, Ohio where the Commandos defeated the ...
Fort Wayne FireHawks: Fort Wayne Freedom Rock River Raptors Wheeling Wildcats Chicago Slaughter 2: Milwaukee Bonecrushers → Chicago Cardinals: 2011: 6 Indianapolis Enforcers Marion Blue Racers Port Huron Predators: Marion Mayhem Fort Wayne FireHawks Wisconsin Wolfpack Chicago Cardinals → Chicago Knights Miami Valley Silverbacks → Dayton ...
The National Gridiron League (NGL) was a proposed gridiron football league. In 2022, after three years of postponed seasons, the organization rebranded as the United Football League (UFL)., [1] prior to the current UFL (formed from the merger of the 2020s USFL and XFL leagues).
The 2010 Fort Wayne Firehawks season was the first season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise. In November 2009, the FireHawks were announced as the successor team to the Fort Wayne Freedom. [1]
Teams that are current of the Continental Indoor Football League. ... Fort Wayne FireHawks (1 C, 2 P) I. Indianapolis Enforcers (3 P) K. Kane County Dawgs (1 C, 1 P)
Before we get our first regular season pitch of the 2025 MLB season, there is spring training. Here's where those games will be played in 2025.
War Memorial Coliseum was known foremost as the home of the NBA's Fort Wayne Pistons for five seasons (1952–57) as well as the 1953 NBA All-Star Game and 1955 and 1956 NBA Finals. After the Pistons moved to Detroit in 1957, the facility continued to host at least one of their games every season from the 1958–59 to 1966–67 campaigns.