This is part of a series of articles I’m writing that’s designed to inform people born in the ‘80s. I’m surrounded by people in their 20s and 30s, yet they are unfamiliar with a lot of great stories. My generation had to learn about the AFL and the ABA, and the current generation needs to know about the NFL’s rival league from the ‘80s, the USFL, and how it changed the game we watch today.
Can you imagine a rival football league starting up these days, signing away star players out of college? In 1983, the league started playing games in the spring, which Fantasy Football owners wouldn’t mind these days also.
Three Heisman winners signed with the USFL, including RB Herschel Walker, QB Doug Flutie and RB Mike Rozier. But those are just three notable college players they got. In the end, the USFL employed four future NFL Hall of Fame players: DE Reggie White, Jim Kelly, Steve Young and Gary Zimmerman.
What if some rival league started up today and signed away recent college stars like Cam Newton, Trent Richardson, A.J. Green, Andrew Luck and, possibly the best Fantasy rookie QB ever, Robert Griffin III?
Future NFL head coaches like Jim Mora and Marv Levy also started in the USFL, and both saw success in the NFL using USFL stars (Kelly and Saints LB Sam Mills). Other future NFL head coaches and notable personalities include: Steve Spurrier, Lindy Infante, Jack Pardee and ESPN personality Lee Corso.
ESPN’s “30 For 30” did a really good job detailing how the USFL was created and later ended, with their documentary, “Small Potatoes: Who Killed the USFL?”
Jim Kelly: He threw for 44 touchdowns and over 5,000 yards as a rookie in 1984, and he eventually joined Levy in Buffalo to run the no-huddle attack that was nicknamed the K-Gun Offense. Kelly was one of the best Fantasy Football quarterbacks ever!
Dan Marino: And while the NFL owners were dumb enough to let QB Dan Marino drop to the 27th overall pick, whereas the USFL’s Los Angeles Express chose Marino with the league’s very first overall draft pick in 1983.
Steve Spurrier: The Heisman winner at Florida coached fellow former Gators QB John Reaves with the Orlando Renegades, where he would begin perfecting his Fun ‘n Gun Offense (known as “Bandit Ball” back then) that he would take to Duke, and then back to the University of Florida. He would win the 1996 National Championship with this team and the Fun ‘n Gun Offense, led by QB Danny Wuerffel.
After winning two USFL rushing titles, the Cowboys drafted him in the fifth round of the 1985 NFL Draft, getting his NFL rights before the USFL folded. He joined RB Tony Dorsett in Dallas in 1986, playing fullback, and forming the first Heisman backfield tandem in NFL history. In 1989, he was traded to Minnesota in a trade that essentially helped the Cowboys to three Super Bowl titles in the ‘90s.
Reggie White: He signed with the Eagles after the USFL folded, and went on to become the NFL’s all-time sacks leader. He was also credited with being the first big-name free agent in NFL history, when he signed with Green Bay in 1993.
Doug Williams: Also, some high-profile NFL players left the league to join the USFL for more money. Players like QB Doug Williams and QB Brian Sipe gave the fledgling league a shot. Williams left Tampa Bay when they wouldn’t pay him a reasonable salary increase. Of course, he would return to the NFL in 1986, and help lead them to a Super Bowl win over the Broncos. He was the first black starting quarterback to win the Super Bowl, and he was named MVP.
Understand that this league many considered a step-child, much like the AFL, made several contributions to the game we watch today.
I’m always interested in old stories like this that just seem to be forgotten in today’s digital age. But the super-power that is the NFL today has both the AFL (before my time) and the USFL to thank. Heck, they even have the XFL (early 2000s) to thank for some other contributions, like the current overtime system in the NFL, and the skycam, which TV crews use to get a bird’s eye view of the playing field.
Even when the USFL was playing, I can’t say that there was a lot of interest in it – at least not from a 12-year-old boy in Central Florida, despite having the Tampa Bay Bandits and Orlando Renegades close by. But the impact from the league’s history certainly requires our respect and attention.
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Also remember that the USFL instituted the incidental pass interference rule and permitted kickers to use a 1" tee for field goals. Great recap on everything you posted here!
Good points! I didn't know that!