California Redwoods Football

California Redwoods

United Football League (2009)

Tombstone

Born: UFL founding franchise
Moved: 2010 (Sacramento Mountain Lions)

First Game: October 8, 2009 (L 30-17 @ Las Vegas Locomotives)
Last Game: November 19, 2009 (L 34-27 vs. Florida Tuskers)

UFL Championships: None

Stadia

AT&T Park
Opened: 2000

Spartan Stadium
Opened: 1933

Marketing

Team Colors:

Ownership

Owner: Paul Pelosi

 

Background

The California Redwoods were an original franchise in the United Football League during the autumn of 2009.  The UFL was the vision of Bill Hambrecht, a San Francisco investment banker who managed Google’s initial public offering in 2004. Hambrecht believed there was an unexploited market for professional football in cities that ranked among the Top 50 media markets in the U.S. but lacked an NFL franchises.

Launcing in the teeth of the Great Recession, Hambrecht found few investors who shared his optimism. One was his friend Paul Pelosi, husband of Speakers of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, who ponied up $12 million for the UFL’s San Francisco franchise in April 2009.

Former Stanford, Minnesota Vikings and Arizona Cardinals head coach Dennis Green hired on as head coach. Many of the Redwoods players had recent NFL experience, though none were former stars in the league. Among the most prominent were former Detroit Lions back-up quarterback Mike McMahon and former Raiders and Patriots wideout Doug Gabriel. On the defensive side of the ball, the Redwoods inked linebacker Dontarrious Thomas, a 2nd round pick of the Minnesota Vikings in 2004.

Failure in Bay Area

The Redwoods were a colosal flop in the Bay. The team’s home debut, a 24-7 victory over the New York Sentinels on October 17, 2009, pulled an announced crowd of just 6,341 at AT&T Park. The team’s second home game on November 14th was moved to San Jose’s smaller, cheaper Spartan Stadium and the results were even worse. The published gate of 4,312 in San Jose was the UFL’s worst crowd of the 2009 season. Five nights later the Redwoods finished out the 2009 season back at AT&T Park with a loss to the Florida Tuskers before another small crowd.

Mercifully for team owner Pelosi, the UFL’s inaugural season was only six games long. The Redwoods finished 2-4.

Running back Cory Ross led the UFL in rushing in 2009 with 462 yards on the ground.

Move to Sacramento & Epilogue

After the season, the team moved to Sacramento where it was re-named the Mountain Lions and found a somewhat more receptive audience. Sacramento led the UFL in attendance in 2011. Pelosi owned the Mountain Lions to the bitter end. The UFL lost over $100 million in 2009 and 2010 alone. Both the 2011 and 2012 seasons were cut short due to financial problems. The UFL played its final game in October 2012.

Pelosi was involved in arbitration and litigation for years afterwards from Redwoods/Mountain Lions head coach Dennis Green (who passed away in 2016 without collecting nearly a million dollars in judgments against the league) and former players and staff seeking unpaid salaries.

 

California Redwoods Video

California Redwoods introductory press conference highlights. Summer 2009.

 

In Memoriam

Redwoods Head Coach Dennis Green died of cardiac arrest at age 67 on July 21, 2016. New York Times obituary.

 

Links

United Football League Programs

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