New Orleans Breakers USFL

New Orleans Breakers

United States Football League (1984)

Tombstone

Born: October 18, 1983 – The Boston Breakers relocate to New Orleans11984 New Orleans Breakers Media Guide
Moved: November 13, 1984 (Portland Breakers)

First Game: February 26, 1984 (W 13-10 @ San Antonio Gunslingers)
Last Game: 
June 24, 1984 (L 20-17 @ Washington Federals)

USFL Championships: None

Stadium

The Louisiana Superdome (69,658)21984 New Orleans Breakers Media Guide
Opened: 1975

Marketing

Team Colors: Process Blue, Blue & Silver31984 Houston Gamblers Media Guide

Ownership

Attendance

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Source: Kenn.com Attendance Project

 

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Background

Marcus Dupree New Orleans Breakers USFLThe Breakers of the United States Football League started out at Boston University’s Nickerson Field in the spring of 1983.  Nickerson seated only 20,000 fans and was a destination of last resort after the Breakers’ first choice – Harvard Stadium – didn’t pan out.  Given the stadium situation in Boston, the franchise had no hope of sustainability there and original owner George Matthews decided to sell.

New Orleans real estate mogul Joseph Canizaro purchased the Boston Breakers in October 1983 for a reported $8 million and moved the team to the Louisiana Superdome.  The Breakers move was Joe Canizaro’s second attempt to bring a pro franchise to the Superdome.  In 1975, he led an unsuccessful effort to acquire and relocate Major League Baseball’s Baltimore Orioles to the building.

Canizaro inherited the roster and coaching staff of the 1983 Boston Breakers. The team was the surprise of the USFL in ’83, going 11-7 and just missing the playoffs with an anonymous roster led by a 35-year old quarterback (Johnnie Walton) with awkward mechanics who hadn’t played in four years.

To this line-up, the 1984 New Orleans Breakers added three talented skill position players.  NFL jumper Dan Ross joined at tight end from the Cincinnati Bengals.  Ross, a Massachusetts native, planned to come home to play in Boston but found himself in the Big Easy instead.  The Breakers also added two big and talented rookie running backs in Buford Jordan out of Louisiana’s McNeese State and the spectacularly gifted 19-year old college dropout Marcus Dupree.  Dupree had the big name and the five-year $6 million contract, but it was Jordan who turned out to be the star, rushing for 1,276 yards and 8 touchdowns.

One & Done in the Big Easy

The Breakers started the 1984 season 5-0 and were 6-1 through seven weeks.  But the team melted down in the second half, losing nine of its final eleven games to finish 8-10 and out of the playoffs.

When it came to the USFL, owner Joe Canizaro’s luck and timing were uncharacteristically lousy.  Although the Breakers drew reasonably well in the Big Easy (30,556 per game in 1984), Canizaro lost a reported $5 million on the team during the 1984 season.

Worse yet, in August 1984, less than a year after Canizaro bought the Breakers, USFL owners were manipulated by Donald Trump of the New Jersey Generals to push through a plan to move to a fall season in 1986.  The move immediately imperiled the ten USFL franchises that shared markets and stadia with NFL teams.  A wave of mergers, shutdowns and relocations followed as the USFL prepared for its final spring season in 1985.  Canizaro could never hope to compete with the NFL’s New Orleans Saints head-to-head in the fall, so he packed the Breakers off to Portland, Oregon.

The Breakers played one final spring season in Portland in 1985 and the folded along with the rest of the USFL.

 

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New Orleans Breakers Video

1984 New Orleans Breakers featurette with Jim Lampley.

 

Breakers host the Chicago Blitz at the Superdome , March 25th 1984. ABC Sports broadcast.

 

In Memoriam

Former New Orleans Breakers offensive lineman Broderick Thompson died from injuries suffered in a motorcycle accident on February 4, 2002.  He was 41 years old.

Breakers tight end Dan Ross died of a heart attack following a jog on May 16, 2006 in Atkinson, New Hampshire.  He was 49. ESPN.com obituary.

Offensive tackle Louis Bullard, who played for the Breakers in Boston, New Orleans and Portland, passed away from cancer on April 18, 2010 at age 53.  Bullard was one of the Breakers’ player representatives and the spokesperson for dozens of Portland Breakers in their long fight to collect unpaid wages from team owner Joe Canizaro.

 

Links

United States Football League Media Guides

USFL Programs

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