Portland Steel | |
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Established 2013 Folded 2016 Played inModa Center inPortland, Oregon PDXSteel.com | |
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League/conference affiliations | |
Arena Football League (2014–2016)
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Current uniform | |
Team colors | Navy blue, royal blue, silver |
Personnel | |
Owner(s) | Arena Football League |
President | Meadow Lemon |
Head coach | Ron James |
Team history | |
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Championships | |
League championships (0) | |
Conference championships (0) | |
Division championships (0) | |
Playoff appearances (3) | |
Home arena(s) | |
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ThePortland Steel were a professionalarena football team based inPortland, Oregon and members of theArena Football League (AFL). The team started as thePortland Thunder, joining the AFL in 2014 as anexpansion team along with theLos Angeles Kiss. The team played their home games at theModa Center. They were known as the Thunder until the franchise went under league ownership in 2016 and became the Steel.[1]
On October 2, 2013, a press conference was held at theModa Center where it was announced that sports investorTerry Emmert had purchased the membership rights to an AFL franchise.[2] Emmert purchased theMilwaukee Mustangs, which had been a defunct franchise since the 2012 season. This essentially gave Emmert the right to an expansion franchise, since none of the team's Milwaukee roots, such as players, front office staff or coaches, remained.[3] When asked what the biggest challenge to running a new franchise was, team president Jared Rose said, "Getting new fans to buy into something that the market really hasn’t seen before. Any new product launch is difficult, but we’ve got an exciting product that once people see it, they are hooked."[4]
On November 8, 2013, the franchise announced that the nicknames, "Thunder", "Enforcers", "Sasquatch", "Growlers" and "Stomp" were the finalist for the team.[5] Six days later, Emmert revealed the team's nickname would be the "Thunder."[6][7] The Thunder nickname has history in Portland dating back to the 1975Portland Thunder, who played atCivic Stadium as members of theWorld Football League (WFL).[8]John Canzano, sports columnist forThe Oregonian, wrote that a "team source" indicated that team owner Terry Emmert selected the team's nickname himself, despite claiming that fans would have the ultimate say. According to Canzano's source the "Growlers" nickname was the most popular among voters followed by the "Sasquatch".[9]
The Portland Thunder began theirtraining camp and held a media day on February 25, 2014. On March 1, the team held an intra-squadscrimmage forseason ticket holders at Tualatin Indoor Soccer inTualatin, Oregon. Their first game occurred on March 17 against theSan Jose SaberCats at the Moda Center.[10]
On February 12, 2014 it was announced that the Thunder had signed formerPortland State Vikingswide receiverJustin Monahan, who is a native ofWest Linn, Oregon.[11] The Thunder have formerOregon DucksquarterbackDarron Thomas on their inaugural roster. When asked about being assigned to Portland, Thomas said, "That was one of the main reasons I came back and accepted this opportunity to come here, just for the fans and I know people are behind me [...] I'm coming in to compete and be the starter and that's what I came out here for."[12]
The Thunder played their first game on St. Patrick's Day, March 17, as 8,509 people came to the Moda Center to see the team lose 64–34 to the San Jose SaberCats. The team started 0–5 before beating the Jacksonville Sharks 69–62 on the road in week 7. After starting 0–4 at home, the Thunder won their first game in Portland in week 11, beating the San Antonio Talons 55–40. Despite finishing 5–13, including an 0–6 divisional record and an even more ghastly 2–11 conference record, the National Conference was so weak, the Thunder slipped into the playoffs. In the conference semifinals, the Thunder actually led 48–45 with less than a minute left, before a miracle finish caused them to lose to the 2-time reigning championArizona Rattlers, 52–48. On September 23, 2014, the Thunder fired head Coach Matthew Sauk.[13] Days later, the team announced the hiring of formerIowa Barnstormers head coachMike Hohensee.
The team finished with the same results in 2015, finishing 5–13. Originally the team finished behind Las Vegas in the playoff race. However, as the AFL folded Las Vegas after the season, they had amazingly slipped into the playoffs again. They lost to the San Jose SaberCats. On August 24, 2015, head coachMike Hohensee and his coaching staff mutually agreed to part ways.[14]
On September 11, 2015, the Thunder agreed to terms to hire formerSpokane Shock head coachAndy Olson as its third head coach in three years.[15]
On January 6, 2016, the AFL announced that they took over operations of the Portland Thunder from owner Terry Emmert.[16] Emmert told thePortland Tribune newspaper that the future of the team was up in the air because he was concerned with the league's medical insurance policies and was hoping to try to attract more investors to help fund the team.[17] This prompted league officials and the board of directors to take control of the franchise and look for new owners.[18] The league also decided to fire Andy Olson and his entire coaching staff before Olson coached a down for the Thunder and replaced them on January 30, 2016, with formerLas Vegas Gladiators,Utah Blaze, andPittsburgh Power head coachRon James. James was also named the team's general manager.
In 2014, Emmert had trademarked the Thunder name, logo, color scheme, and identity (similar to whatDallas Cowboys ownerJerry Jones did with the identity of the now-defunctDallas Desperados in the early 2000s). As of February 3, 2016, Emmert still legally owned the trademarks of the team, despite reports to the contrary, and had no intentions of selling them to the league.[19] Because Emmert owns the rights to the name, there was a possibility of a return of the Thunder name to the AFL or a new team named Thunder joining theIndoor Football League, butonly if the Portland AFL franchise fails in 2016.[citation needed]
On February 24, 2016, the franchise was given a new name, re-branded the Portland Steel by the AFL. The name was derived from the region's steel industry and rich history. According to the AFL's website, the steel industry has been a backbone of the Portland working culture for over 150 years. Steel is an overtly visible part of the Portland landscape, with foundries decorating both the Willamette and Columbia Rivers, and is seen in several of the city's 12 iconic bridges.[20][21]
The Steel finished the 2016 season with a 3–13, but were guaranteed a playoff spot as all teams played in the playoffs. The team lost in the first round to Arizona, 84–40, in what would be the team's last game. The AFL officially folded the Steel franchise in October 2016 and placed its players into a dispersal draft conducted on October 14, 2016.[22]
On September 7, 2017, Portland television stationKGW did an investigation about the AFL's operations following the takeover of the franchise from Emmert and reported that the league's owners Arena Football One, LLC, quietly shut down the operations following the 2016 season and left town leaving a trail of unpaid bills and failing to pay former employees and vendors money owed to them.
After taking over the franchise and re-branding it as the Steel, AFL commissionerScott Butera said in a press release, "We highly value the Thunder fans and this step was needed to stabilize the team in the Portland market."
Employees, staff, vendors and even broadcasters were owned combined thousands of dollars in unpaid bills prompting several lawsuits against Arena Football One, LLC. As of September 2017, only one lawsuit was settled out of court. Phone calls and emails to the league office in Las Vegas went unanswered. The investigation even uncovered a sports jersey company in Las Vegas being owed $13,000 for manufacturing home black jerseys for theLas Vegas Outlaws in 2016. That company had still not been paid and there has been no indication of payment.[23][24]
Additionally, the same former employees and vendors received a letter from a law office in Vermont representing "Arena Football One, LLC". The letter said the league was restructuring finances, but offered 10 to 15 percent of the money owed, if the former employees agreed not to sue. The parties refused the offer and still planned on suing the now-former AFL ownership group following the report at the time.[25]
On February 1, 2023, four years after the folding of the second incarnation of the AFL and seven years after the demise of the Steel, a third incarnation of the AFL was announced as were 16 potential cities reported byTMZ. One of the new teams would be based in Oregon, butnot Portland. Instead, the new franchise would be located inSalem, much to the surprise of many.[26] On October 25, 2023, the new team was officially announced and will be known as theOregon Blackbears.[27][28] However, that team folded after various complications and playing only three games. It was replaced by theOregon Lightning the following year, that team being based inRedmond in the revival league's successor,Arena Football One.[29] The Lightning name was chosen in homage to the Thunder.[30]
Portland Steel roster | ||||||
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Quarterbacks Fullbacks Wide receivers | Offensive linemen Defensive linemen | Linebackers Defensive backs Kickers | Injured reserve
Other league exempt
League suspension
Inactive reserve
Team suspension
Refused to report
Recallable reassignment
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The following Thunder/Steel players were named toAll-Arena Teams:
Portland Steel staff | ||||||
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Front office
| Head coach
Offensive coaches
Defensive coaches
| Sports Medicine
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On October 8, 2013,Matthew Sauk was named the Thunder's inaugural head coach.[31] Sauk had previously worked for theUtah Blaze, where he served as anassistant coach andoffensive coordinator.[31] Following the team's inaugural season, in which Sauk led Portland to a 5–13 record, Sauk was dismissed as head coach and replaced byMike Hohensee.[32] On August 24, 2015, Hohensee suffered the same exact fate as he and his staff mutually agreed to part ways after he coached the team to an identical 5-13 record and a second trip to the playoffs.[33] On September 11, 2015,Andy Olson was named the team's third head coach in franchise history.[34] On January 30, 2016,Ron James replaced Olson as head coach.
Name | Term | Regular season | Playoffs | Awards | ||||
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W | L | T | Win% | W | L | |||
Matthew Sauk | 2014 | 5 | 13 | 0 | .278 | 0 | 1 | |
Mike Hohensee | 2015 | 5 | 13 | 0 | .278 | 0 | 1 | |
Andy Olson | Did not coach | 0 | 0 | 0 | – | 0 | 0 | |
Ron James | 2016 | 3 | 13 | 0 | .188 | 0 | 1 |
On March 11, 2014, the Thunder established a local television deal withNBC Sports Northwest. Scott Lynn provided play-by-play, Jordan Kent was a color analyst, and Megan Berrey served as sideline reporter. Periodically,Portland Trail Blazers TV broadcasterMike Barrett filled in on play-by-play.[35][36] They also announced a radio deal withKXTG Sports Radio 750 AM with Jeremy Scott on the play-by-play and Brian Perkins as color analyst.[37]