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† Midwest Football League champions. [23] The Lansing All-Stars played against the Central States Football League champion Racine Raiders in an exhibition game after the season on November 28, 1964. [24] The Toronto team did not show up to a game against Lansing, and were subsequently removed from the league in the middle of the season. [25]
Central Midwest Football League, [8] 2014– American 7s Football League, [9] 2014– Puerto Rico American Football League, 2014– Atlantic Football Association, 2014– Florida Champion Football League, 2017– Cactus Football League, 2018– North Louisiana Football Alliance, 2019– Southern Elite Football League, 2021–
Wichita Force, professional Indoor football; Kansas Diamondbacks Minor-Pro Football, member of the Central Midwest Football League; Wichita Skyhawks Semi-Pro football, member of the Central Midwest Football League
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
In April 1964, the two leagues, along with the Central States Football League, the Midwest Football League, and the Southern Football League, formed the Association of Minor Football Leagues. The association also included the non-paying semi-pro New England Football Conference, [42] [43] and appointed UFL commissioner George T. Gareff as the ...
The Raiders were the first minor league football team to gain 501(c)(3) Not-For-Profit status from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in 1990. [2] The organization is composed entirely of volunteers. The helmet design is a silver background with a cowboy bandit in black with an eye patch on the left eye with a half and half bandanna of cardinal ...
They remained in the league for the 1978 season, [20] competing in the South High School stadium in Youngstown and coached again by Boggia. [19] During the 1979 season, the Hardhats were considered ninth in the country for minor league football teams. [21] They played in the Mid-Atlantic Football League again in 1980 [22] and 1981. [23]
The Midwest Football League (MFL) was a professional American football minor league that existed from 1935 to 1940. Originally comprising teams from Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois, the league eventually expanded its reach to include teams from Missouri, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and California to become a national league with major league aspirations by 1939.