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By April 1961, six cities had been approved for franchises in the Midwest Football League: Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo, Ohio; Grand Rapids, Michigan; Indianapolis; and Louisville, Kentucky. [2] Players were to be paid $50 salaries per game played, with 30 players on each team's roster. [2] The league played its games on Saturday nights. [2]
Each of the 12 teams of Minor League Baseball's Midwest League carry a 30-man active roster. [1] Only these players are eligible to play. Teams may have any number of inactive players on their rosters at a given time who do not count toward active roster limits. Injured players may be placed on the injured list (7-day or 60-day). [2]
The final home game of the season was shifted to Midland, Michigan: a 62-6 pounding at the hands of Ohio Valley in front of 3,450, dropping Michigan's final record to 1-11. In January 1969, the Arrows announced a permanent move to Midland, [ 5 ] as well as a name change to the Tri-City Apollos . [ 6 ]
The Dayton Colts were a semi-professional American football team that played from 1946 to 1949 and 1953 to 1975. The team was based in Ohio.It competed in the Inter-State Semipro Football League in 1947 as the Dayton Rockets; Tristate Semipro Football League in 1953 and American Football Conference from 1959 to 1961 as the Dayton Triangles; Midwest Football League from 1963 to 1969, 1971 to ...
The league will use the USFL's kickoff rule, which resembles that used at most levels of the game but kicks off from the kicking team's 20-yard line instead of the 35-yard line used at the college and NFL levels at the time (as opposed to the XFL rule—also adopted by the NFL in 2024—which kicked off from the 30-yard line but had the ...
Wishart was awarded the North American Hockey League's (NAHL) Midwest Division 2nd Star of the Week after his 40-save performance against the Windigo. It was his first shutout of the season and ...
[[Category:Current Midwest League team rosters templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page. Otherwise, add <noinclude>[[Category:Current Midwest League team rosters templates]]</noinclude> to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on the same line as the code's last character.
Midwest Football League may refer to: . Mid West Football League, an Australian rules football competition based in the Eyre Peninsula region of South Australia; Midwest Football League (1921–1932), a minor professional American football league that was known as the Chicago Football League, in which the Chicago Cardinals played, from 1904 to 1920