Category: Arena Football 2

2000 Greensboro Prowlers Media Guide from Arena Football 2

Greensboro Prowlers

The Greensboro Prowlers were a misbegotten indoor football team that competed in the minor league Arena Football 2 (AF2) during the early 2000’s. The Prowlers’ misadventures included a 103-3 home loss at the hands of the league’s best team, the Quad City Steamwheelers, during the 2000 season.

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San Diego Riptide Arena Football 2

San Diego Riptide

The San Diego Riptide were a minor league indoor football team that played four seasons in Arena Football 2 (AF2). The Riptide were part of a West Coast expansion of AF2 in the year 2002 that saw franchises added in Bakersfield, Fresno and Hawaii to create a Western Division in the sprawling, 34-team league. The Riptide lasted four seasons at the Sports Arena, never managing to post a winning record.

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2007 Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings Program from Arena Football 2

Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings

The Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings were a minor league Arena Football team that competed for nine seasons in northwestern Louisiana. The team was known as the Bossier City Battle Wings from 2001 to 2003.  It adopted the Bossier-Shreveport moniker in 2004 after an ownership change. Former Dallas Cowboys starting quarterback Quincy Carter played for the Battle Wings during the 2007 season.

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2002 New Haven Ninjas pocket schedule from Arena Football 2

New Haven Ninjas

The New Haven Ninjas were a One-Year Wonder that were part of Arena Football 2, a small-market offshoot of the original Arena Football League (1987-2008). The Ninjas went 6-10 in their only season of operation in 2002 before arena problems left the team homeless. The Ninjas’ season-ending victory over the Rochester Brigade on July 27th, 2002 before an announced crowd of 4,588 was the final professional team sporting event played at the New Haven Coliseum.

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Hawaiian Islanders Arena Football

Hawaiian Islanders (2002-2004)

The Hawaiian Islanders competed in Arena Football 2 (AF2) the small market developmental spinoff of the original Arena Football League, from 2002 to 2004. The team played at the Neal Blaisdell Center, a 6,500-seat auditorium near downtown Honolulu. Charles Wang, the billionaire owner of the NHL’s New York Islanders, owned the franchise along with his daughter Kimberly. The AF2 franchise derived its name from the elder Wang’s hockey team. The team disbanded in October 2004 after three season of heavy financial losses.

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