Green Bay Bombers | |
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Established 1997 Folded 2000 Played in Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena in Green Bay, Wisconsin | |
League/conference affiliations | |
Professional Indoor Football League (1998) Indoor Football League (1999–2000)
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Current uniform | |
Team colors | Black, green, gold, white |
Personnel | |
Owner(s) | Keary Ecklund |
Head coach | Mario Russo (1998–1999) Bud Keyes (1999–2000) |
Team history | |
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Championships | |
League championships (1)
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Conference championships (0) | |
Division championships (0) | |
Playoff appearances (3) | |
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Home arena(s) | |
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The Green Bay Bombers were an indoor football team that played in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) in 1998, and in the Indoor Football League (IFL) in 1999 and 2000. The Bombers franchise was owned by Keary Ecklund. The team office was based in Neenah, Wisconsin, and played their games at the Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena. The Bombers were coached by Mario Russo for the 1998 PIFL season and part of the 1999 IFL season and by Bud Keyes for the remainder of the 1999 and 2000 IFL seasons.
The Bombers played four preseason Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) games in 1998. Losing only once:
The Green Bay Bombers tied with their sister team, Madison Mad Dogs, for the second best record in the PIFL with a 10–4 record. In the playoffs, the Bombers had to travel to Madison in the first round. They lost 19–46.
Keary Ecklund took his Bombers and Mad Dogs teams and defected from the PIFL to form the Indoor Football League (IFL). In 1999, the team finished with the second best record in the league at 9–3. The start of the season was not pretty, as the team lost two of their first three games, both loses to Peoria. The week before the playoffs, the Bombers beat Duluth, 52–15. Despite the great regular season record, the team was forced to travel to Lincoln in the playoffs. The Bombers brought back a 44–34 victory and a trip to Peoria for the IFL Gold Cup Championship. The Bombers won, 63–60.
The following year was very similar. After a mediocre 6–4 start, the Bombers won their final four games by large margins. After being routed 40–16 by Peoria, the Bombers took their frustrations out on LaCrosse to get the four game streak started, 62–26. The Bombers' actually got a home playoff game this time around and they took advantage of it, crushing Dayton, 64–23. Their bid for a repeat championship ended the following week, with a 21–10 loss at Steel Valley. When the IFL was sold, the Bombers disappeared.
In 2003, Green Bay got an AF2 team, the Green Bay Blizzard.
Season | W | L | T | Finish | Playoff results |
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Green Bay Bombers (PIFL) | |||||
1998 | 10 | 4 | 0 | 3rd League | Lost Semifinal (Madison) |
Green Bay Bombers (IFL) | |||||
1999 | 9 | 3 | 0 | 2nd Northern | Won Semifinal (Lincoln Lightning) Won Gold Cup I (Peoria) |
2000 | 10 | 4 | 0 | 2nd EC Northern | Won Round 1 (Dayton) Won Quarterfinal (S.V. Smash) Lost Semifinal (Peoria) |
Totals | 32 | 13 | 0 | (including playoffs) |
The Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) was the second league to successfully play indoor football as a paid pro-league sport, after the Arena Football League (AFL). Since the AFL had a patent given in 1990 on the gameplay of "Arena Football", the PIFL played with mostly the same rules, but without the endzone nets. The PIFL only lasted one season (1998) under that name.
The Indoor Football League (IFL) began in 1999 as an offshoot of the troubled Professional Indoor Football League. Keary Ecklund, the owner of the Green Bay Bombers and Madison Mad Dogs, left the PIFL after its first, financially troubled, season to start his own league. Unlike the PIFL, the IFL was an "entity league"; teams were owned by the league and franchised out to management groups. NFL Hall-of-Famer Kellen Winslow was brought in as commissioner. The league was successful enough for a major expansion in 2000. Expansion was done regionally to cut down on travel expenses. Hence, the majority of the teams were in the Midwest. Their championship game was known as the Gold Cup.
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