Las Vegas
Las Vegas Gladiators
| Las
Vegas Gladiators |
|
|
| Conference |
American |
| Division |
Western |
| Year founded |
1997 |
| Home arena |
Thomas & Mack Center |
| City, State |
Las Vegas, Nevada |
| Wild card titles |
3:
1997, 1998, 2003 |
| Division titles |
1:
2002 |
| Conference titles |
none |
|
ArenaBowl championships |
none |
History
New Jersey Red Dogs (1997-2000)

The New Jersey Red Dogs entered the
Arena Football League in 1997, along with the Nashville Kats and the New York
CityHawks. Their ownership group, which was led by New Jersey radio entrepreneur
E. Burke Ross, also included several ex-NFL players, such as Joe Morris, Carl
Banks, and Harry Carson. The Red Dogs played at Continental Airlines Arena in
the New Jersey Meadowlands.
The AFL's intention was to add only New Jersey and Nashville for 1997.
However, well after the awarding of the Red Dogs and Kats franchises, the owners
of
Madison Square Garden in New York City requested a franchise of their own, and
the league granted this request. And so the CityHawks also began play in 1997.
This had an impact on the Red Dogs, in that the league then prevented the Red
Dogs from advertising in New York. While North Jersey itself is very populous in
its own right, the Red Dogs had hoped to be the team for the entire New York
metropolitan area.
Despite this setback, the Red Dog management built a good team, which opened
its history in memorable fashion. The team won 8 of its first 9 games, including
a victory in their inaugural game on a last-second game-winning
field goal, a thrilling overtime victory against the Albany Firebirds, a
thorough thrashing of the Iowa Barnstormers (runners-up in the previous year's
ArenaBowl X), and also one game in which they scored a then-record 91 points
against the Texas Terror. (This record has since been surpassed by the New York
Dragons, who scored 99 in a game against the Carolina Cobras in 2001.)
The Red Dogs were led by head coach
John Hufnagel, who had been a quarterback and offensive coordinator for the
Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, and who has since gone on to
be an offensive coach for several National Football League teams, including the
New England Patriots and the New York Giants.
Hufnagel brought in several players with CFL experience to the Red Dogs,
including QB Rickey Foggie, a fearless -- sometimes reckless -- player whose
unpredictablity kept defenses on their toes; and offensive specialist Larry Ray
Willis, a stern-faced, intense receiver who had great hands and
was very difficult to tackle.
The team's other main receiver was
Alvin Ashley, a player whose small size (150 lb.) made him unlikely to play
in the NFL, but who was perfectly built for the Arena game (illustrating the
differing physical requirements of the two games).
The Red Dogs slumped late in their first season, winning only 1 of their
final 5 games (the win coming against the CityHawks) to finish 9-5, then losing
to the
Orlando Predators in the first round of the playoffs.
The team returned intact for
1998, and had another winning campaign, going 8-6, including a road victory up
in Albany. The Red Dogs also won their first playoff game in their second year,
a thrilling road victory against their biggest rivals, the Firebirds. (It is
worth noting that the Firebirds and not the floundering CityHawks became the Red
Dogs' main rivals.)
During the 1998 season, the Red Dogs traded their back-up quarterback to the
Iowa Barnstormers. The Barnstormers had gone to two ArenaBowls under their star
QB, Kurt Warner; but Warner signed with the NFL's St. Louis Rams, whom he went
on to lead to victory in Super Bowl XXXIV following the 1999 season, while being
named the game's Most Valuable Player as well as the league's regular season
MVP. (Warner would be named NFL MVP once again in 2001.) The quarterback the Red
Dogs sent to Iowa was Aaron Garcia, who has remained with that franchise ever
since, moving with them when the franchise became the New York Dragons in 2001.
Garcia has since become one of the greatest QBs in AFL history, throwing for
well over 700 touchdowns. Garcia ranks no. 1 or no. 2 in virtually every
statistical category, occasionally trading places on the all-time lists with
another veteran QB, Andy Kelly.
Hufnagel left the Red Dogs after the 1998 season for a job with the NFL's
Cleveland Browns, and he was replaced by Frank Mattiace, who had played on the
defensive line for New Jersey Generals of the USFL.
Without Hufnagel -- and without Larry Ray Willis, who had been traded to the
Milwaukee Mustangs -- the Red Dogs slumped in 1999 to their first losing
season, going 6-8. This, despite winning 3 of their first 4, including yet
another one-point victory over Albany (a controversial victory in which an
Albany receiver was penalized for taking his helmet off during a touchdown
celebration, thus adding yards to the extra-point attempt, which was then
missed).
The Red Dogs made a huge trade following the 1999 season, but it was one
which they never got to benefit from. New Jersey sent Alvin Ashley to the
Orlando Predators for wide receiver/defensive back
Barry Wagner, widely regarded (indeed, almost undisputedly regarded) as the
greatest player in the league's history. However, soon after the trade, the
league and its players agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement that
resulted in several veteran players -- including Wagner -- achieving free
agency. Wagner then signed with the San Jose SaberCats, leaving the Red Dogs with neither him nor Ashley.
In
2000, the Red Dogs, with no Wagner and no Ashley, and also without their other
offensive mainstay, wide receiver/linebacker Chad Lindsey, fell to 4-10. Not
even the presence of another AFL legend, former Tampa Bay Storm and Detroit
Drive offensive specialist George LaFrance, could stave off the collapse.
Foggie lost his job as starting QB, replaced by Tommy Maddox, who had had a
disappointing NFL career up until that point, and who later returned to the NFL
to have several excellent seasons for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Coach Mattiace
also lost his job, replaced mid-season on an interim basis by Kevin Guy, a former defensive back/wide receiver who had played two full
seasons with the Red Dogs.
New Jersey Gladiators (2001-2002)
Before the 2001 season, the New Jersey team was sold to
Jim Ferraro, a lawyer from Miami. Ferraro changed the team name to the New
Jersey Gladiators. The new ownership appointed as head coach the ex-CityHawk
boss Lary Kuharich, who had won ArenaBowl VII in 1993 with the Tampa Bay Storm,
and acquired Connell Maynor from Orlando to be the starting QB.
Maynor had led the Predators to victory in ArenaBowl XIV the previous season,
and was named the game's MVP. An all-around threat, Maynor had played with the
CityHawks under Kuharich in 1997, but took only one snap all season behind Mike
Perez. Instead, the CityHawks used him as a wide receiver/linebacker, and one
week he even won the award for the league's best "ironman" (player who plays
both on offense and defense, as 6 of 8 players must do in Arena Football).
The Gladiators reached the lowest ebb in the history of the franchise in
2001, winning only 2 out of 14 games that season. The club's top receivers
attained roughly half the amount of yards that Larry Ray Willis had done in each
of the franchise's first two seasons, and the rushing leader was QB Maynor
himself.
In
2002, the club had another new coach, Frank Haege, who had been a Red Dog
assistant under John Hufnagel. After leaving the Red Dogs, Haege went on to
coach the Quad City Steamwheelers of the AFL's minor-league circuit af2. Haege's Quad
City team dominated the af2 for two seasons, even winning one game by a score of
103-3. (Haege was later charged by the AFL with violating the af2 salary cap
rules at Quad City, and was fined heavily by the league. Also, the Quad City
team was banned from the af2 playoffs in 2002.)
The Gladiators' new QB for 2002 was Jay McDonagh, who had played under Haege
at Quad City. Former Red Dog Alvin Ashley was back with the club, seeing limited
duty; however, this time around the main New Jersey receiver was Mike Horacek, who had starred for the Iowa Barnstormers, and has since
returned to that franchise to play for the Dragons. The Gladiators' fortunes
turned around, and they had their first winning season since 1998, going 9-5 and
hosting a playoff game for the first time (a loss to Orlando).
The New Jersey Gladiators looked all set to go for the
2003 season. The 2003 season would be the first one to begin in February instead
of April, and it would be the first one in which the league's games would be
televised weekly by NBC.
However, with only weeks to go before the start of the season, owner Ferraro
moved the team to Las Vegas. The move came as a shock to the team's fans, as the
Gladiators were sending out ticket package offers even through their last week
in New Jersey.
The AFL schedules for the 2003 season had already been devised, so the Las
Vegas Gladiators would play that season in the Eastern Division of the National
Conference, before shifting in
2004 to the American Conference's Western Division.
Las Vegas Gladiators (2003-present)
The Las Vegas Gladiators are an
Arena Football League team based in
Las Vegas, Nevada. The team relocated to Las Vegas for the 2003 season and plays
its home games at the Thomas & Mack Center on the campus of the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas, formerly the home venue of a previous Arena
team, the
Las Vegas Sting. The Gladiators currently compete in the Western Division of the
AFL's American Conference.
Hosting ArenaBowl
For up to the next 3 years, Las Vegas will host the
Arena Bowl,
beginning with Arena Bowl XIX in June of 2005.
Head Coaches
John Hufnagel -- 1997-1998
Frank Mattiace -- 1999-2000
Kevin Guy -- 2000
Lary Kuharich -- 2001
Frank Haege -- 2002-2004
Ron James -- 2005-
Notable Players
Alvin Ashley - WR/DB
Clint Dolezel - QB
Joe Douglass - WR/LB
Rickey Foggie - QB
Mike Horacek - OS
Eric Houle - K
Matt Kinsinger - FB/LB
Steve Konopka - OL/DL
Mark Lewis - K
Chad Lindsey - WR/LB
Jay McDonagh - QB
Marcus Nash - OS
Junior Lord - WR/DB
Alonzo Spellman - DL
Steve Videtich - K
Larry Ray Willis - OS
Season-by-season
Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties
| Season |
W |
L |
T |
Finish |
Playoffs |
| New Jersey Red Dogs |
| 1997 |
9 |
5 |
0 |
2nd NC Eastern |
-- |
| 1998 |
8 |
6 |
0 |
2nd NC Eastern |
-- |
| 1999 |
6 |
8 |
0 |
2nd NC Eastern |
-- |
| 2000 |
4 |
10 |
0 |
4th NC Eastern |
-- |
| New Jersey Gladiators |
| 2001 |
2 |
12 |
0 |
4th NC Eastern |
-- |
| 2002 |
9 |
5 |
0 |
1st NC Eastern |
Lost Week 2 (Orlando
Predators) |
| Las Vegas Gladiators |
| 2003 |
8 |
8 |
0 |
3rd NC Eastern |
Lost Week 1 (Arizona
Rattlers) |
| 2004 |
8 |
8 |
0 |
4th AC Western |
-- |
| 2005 |
8 |
8 |
0 |
3rd AC Western |
-- |
| *2006 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
T-1st AC Western |
-- |
*=Current Standing
External links
-
AFL Official Website
-
Las Vegas Gladiators Official Website
-
ArenaFan Online
-
Las Vegas Gladiators at ArenaFan Online
-
New Jersey Gladiators at ArenaFan Online
-
New Jersey Red Dogs at ArenaFan Online
-
"New Jersey Red Dogs acquire Barry Wagner from Orlando", AP via SLAM!
Sports, September 23, 1999
-
"Red Dogs sold, name changed to Gladiators", AP via CNNSI.com, February 12,
2001
-
"Gladiators roll the dice toward Vegas" by Marc Viquez, ArenaFan Online,
December 27, 2002
-
Alvin Ashley Fan Page
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