Quarterback Clint Dolezel on the cover of the 1998 Houston ThunderBears Media Guide from the Arena Football League

Houston ThunderBears

Arena Football League (1998-2001)

Tombstone

Born: December 1997 – Re-branded from Texas Terror
Folded:
2001

First Game: May 1, 1998 (L 64-40 @ Nashville Kats)
Last Game: July 21, 2001 (L 80-27 @ San Jose SaberCats)

Arena Bowl Championships: None

Arena

Compaq Center (15,050)11999 Arena Football League Official Record & Fact Book
Opened: 1975
Closed: 2003 (Re-opened as a mega-church in 2005)

Marketing

Team Colors: Thunder Blue, Touchdown Teal & Electric Orange21999 Arena Football League Official Record & Fact Book

Ownership

Owners:

 

Our Favorite Stuff

houston ThunderBears
Logo T-Shirt

The Arena Football League’s ThunderBears were Houston’s pro football entertainment option for the years between the Houston Oilers’ departure in 1997 and the return of the NFL with the Texans in 2003. The indoor game never caught on in Houston as it did in other southern cities and the ‘Bears typically drew some of the smallest crowds in the league.
This ThunderBears design is available in sizes Small through 4XL today at Old School Shirts!

 

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Background

The Arena Football League awarded a Houston, Texas expansion franchise to NBA Houston Rockets owner Leslie Alexander on October 26th, 1995.  Alexander, a former Wall Street stock trader who purchased the Rockets in 1993, named the team the Texas Terror and placed them in the Houston Summit, as part of his burgeoning local pro sports empire.  (Alexander would add a founding franchise in the WNBA – the Houston Comets – to his stable in 1997).

After two losing season on the field and at the box office, Alexander and his executives scrapped the Texas Terror brand concept in December 1997.  The franchise continued under Alexander’s ownership and was re-branded the Houston ThunderBears.

New Name, Same Problems

The Thunderbears trotted out their new “Thunder Blue, Touchdown Teal and Electric Orange” colors on May 9th, 1998 at the Compaq Center.  (Another offseason re-branding project…after nearly a quarter century as the Houston Summit, the personal computing giant bought naming rights to the building in late 1997.).  Only 4,629 curiosity-seekers turned out to see the ThunderBears defeat the Florida Bobcats.  It was the last time the would crack the 4,000 mark all season, except for a season finale outlier crowd of 9,734, a number which would seem to have all the hallmarks of a massive discounting/comping effort.

1999 Houston ThunderBears Program from the Arena Football League

In Competition

On the field, at least, the team continued to improve under new Head Coach Steve Thonn.  The ThunderBears won the Central Division title with an 8-6 record, riding the arm of former East Texas State quarterback Clint Dolezel who threw 81 touchdown passes.  The Arizona Rattlers eliminated the T-Bears in the first round of the Arena Football playoffs in August 1998.

Under Thonn, the Thunderbears led the Arena Football League in total offense for three consecutive years from 1998 to 2000. But the club fell back to losing records in 1999 and 2000, failing to return to the playoffs.  Attendance bottomed out in 1999, when the club averaged a  league-worst 3,022 fans.  This included an embarrassing crowd of 1,517 for a May 1st, 1999 game against the Grand Rapids Rampage at Compaq Center. It was the smallest announced crowd in the Arena Football League’s 13-year history.

Touring Season & Demise

Under the circumstances, it was remarkable that Leslie Alexander hung in for as long as he did.  On February 16th, 2001, on the eve of the team’s 6th season, Alexander sold the franchise back to the Arena Football League for an undisclosed sum.  The league designated the now homeless T-Bears as a travel team, barnstorming across the country to gauge interest for expansion franchises for Arena Football 2, the small market developmental offshoot league.  The T-Bears “home games” would be played in far flung cities such as Bismarck (ND), Charleston (WV), Fresno (CA), Lubbock (TX) and Madison (WI).

The ThunderBears finished their final season in last place in Arena Football’s Western Division with a 3-11 record.  Arena Football folded the club following the 2001 season.

 

Houston Thunderbears Shop

 

 

Links

Arena Football League Media Guides

Arena Football League Programs

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