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Hammond Pros

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Defunct American football team
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(January 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Hammond Pros
Founded1917
Suspended1926
Based inHammond, Indiana, U.S.
LeagueNational Football League
Team historyHammond Pros (1920–1926)
Team colorsPurple, gold, white
   
Head coachesHank Gillo (1920)
Max Hicks (1921)
Wally Hess (1922–1924)
Fritz Pollard (1925)
Doc Young (1925)
Owner(s)Paul Parduhn
Doc Young
Home field(s)Cubs Park

TheHammond Pros were anAmerican football team fromHammond, Indiana that played in theNational Football League from 1920 to 1926 as atraveling team.

History

[edit]

The Pros were established by local businessmanPaul Parduhn andDr. Alva Young. Young, a boxing promoter and owner of a racing stable, also served as doctor/trainer (and part-owner) for a semi-pro football team operated by the Hammond Clabby Athletic Association from 1915 to 1917. In 1918, Young presided over a new team known as the "Hammond All-Stars" and played against many of the teams that would form the backbone of theAmerican Professional Football Association (including theRacine Cardinals,Detroit Heralds,Rock Island Independents,Minneapolis Marines,Cleveland Tigers,Canton Bulldogs, andToledo Maroons); Young attended the historic meeting inCanton, Ohio at which the APFA was formed in 1920. (It is said that a game between Hammond and Canton, playedThanksgiving Day 1919 and drawing some 12,000 spectators in Chicago, convinced team owners that a league would be viable.)

In 1919, the team starredGeorge Halas atwide receiver; Halas left for theDecatur Staleys – the future Chicago Bears – the following year, remaining with that franchise as a player, coach and owner until his death in 1983.

Despite the name, the Pros were little more than a semi-professional outfit; most of the players were locals who had full-time jobs and couldn't practice much, and thus were simply no match for most other NFL squads. Nor did they really represent Hammond, as the town's stadium (A. Murray Turner Field) was built for baseball and seated only a few thousand. The Pros would play only two regular-season NFL games in Hammond over their seven years in the league,[1][2] and would useCubs Park in Chicago as an unofficial "home" stadium[citation needed]. Nevertheless, Young kept the team going in the NFL for seven years and 34 games, with a combined record of 5–26–4. The Pros might have lasted even longer, but after winning the 1926 battle with theAmerican Football League, theNFL decided to scale down to 12 teams, getting rid of many of the smaller franchises, including the Pros.

Of the nineAfrican-American players in the league during those years, six played for the Pros, including the first African-American head coach in the NFL,Fritz Pollard, and the successful music producerMayo "Ink" Williams.

Hall of Famers

[edit]
Hammond Pros Hall of Famers
No.NamePositionTenureInducted
Paddy DriscollQB/HB19191965
George HalasEnd19191963
Fritz PollardHB
Coach
1923, 19252005

Season-by-season

[edit]
Season records for the Hammond Pros
YearWLTFinishCoach
192025012thHank Gillo
192113113thMax Hicks
192205115thWally Hess
192315115th
192422110th
192514014thFritz Pollard,Doc Young
192604021stDoc Young

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Duluth Eskimos at Hammond Pros".Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference. RetrievedJanuary 2, 2022.
  2. ^1923 Hammond Pros Statistics & Players

External links

[edit]
The Franchise
Stadiums
Seasons
Head Coaches
Owners
Hall of Famers
League affiliations
Charter
teams
1920s
1930s–50s
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