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World Bowl - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Championship of the WLAF/NFL Europe

For the 1974 championship game of the World Football League, see

World Bowl (WFL)

.

The World Bowl was the annual American football championship game of the World League of American Football, later called NFL Europe. The World Bowl was played each year from 1991 to 2007 (except 1993 and 1994).

The first World Bowl was played in 1991 in London.[1] With the 1995 relaunch of the World League with the North American teams removed, all subsequent World Bowls were played in Europe between European clubs. The only World Bowl to take place outside Europe was World Bowl '92 in Montreal, Canada.

The World Bowl trophy was a globe made of glass measuring 35.5 cm (14 inches) in diameter and weighing 18.6 kg (41 lbs).

When the World League of American Football (WLAF) was founded in 1991, with teams in North America and Europe as well as expansion plans for Asia, the name World Bowl was appropriate. The name was kept after 1995 when the league limited itself exclusively to Europe.

From 1995 to 1997, the World Bowl venue was decided by the standings after five weeks of the 10-week season. In other years, the sites were predetermined before the season. The 2002 World Bowl was hosted in Rhein Fire's hometown of Düsseldorf as a farewell to the old Rheinstadion. After the new LTU Arena (now Merkur Spiel-Arena) was completed, the 2005 World Bowl was hosted there again. It would return in 2006, the first time that the game was played in the same site in consecutive years. As the city's Fortuna Düsseldorf team spent much of this time in lower tiers of the German soccer pyramid, Düsseldorf was the rare NFL Europe city in which American football held an arguably competitive position.

Nine World Bowls were played on Saturdays and six World Bowls were played on Sundays (1991, 1996–1999, 2000).

World Bowl (WLAF, NFL Europe, and NFL Europa Championships)[edit] Date Winner Score Runner-Up MVP Venue Attendance Refs. June 9, 1991 World Bowl '91 London Monarchs 21 – 0 Barcelona Dragons Dan Crossman
Monarchs, Safety Wembley Stadium, London, United Kingdom 61,108 June 6, 1992 World Bowl '92 Sacramento Surge 21 – 17 Orlando Thunder David Archer
Surge, QB Olympic Stadium, Montreal, Canada 43,789 1993 League suspended 1994 June 17, 1995 World Bowl '95 Frankfurt Galaxy 26 – 22 Amsterdam Admirals Paul Justin
Galaxy, QB Olympisch Stadion, Amsterdam, Netherlands 23,847 June 23, 1996 World Bowl '96 Scottish Claymores 32 – 27 Frankfurt Galaxy Yo Murphy
Claymores, WR Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh, United Kingdom 38,982 June 22, 1997 World Bowl '97 Barcelona Dragons 38 – 24 Rhein Fire Jon Kitna
Dragons, QB Estadi Olimpic, Barcelona, Spain 31,100 June 14, 1998 World Bowl '98 Rhein Fire 34 – 10 Frankfurt Galaxy Jim Arellanes
Fire, QB Waldstadion, Frankfurt, Germany 47,846 June 27, 1999 World Bowl '99 Frankfurt Galaxy 38 – 24 Barcelona Dragons Andy McCullough
Galaxy, WR Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf, Germany 39,643 June 25, 2000 World Bowl 2000 Rhein Fire 13 – 10 Scottish Claymores Aaron Stecker
Claymores, RB Waldstadion, Frankfurt, Germany 35,860 June 30, 2001 World Bowl IX Berlin Thunder 24 – 17 Barcelona Dragons Jonathan Quinn
Thunder, QB Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands 32,116 June 22, 2002 World Bowl X Berlin Thunder 26 – 20 Rhein Fire Dane Looker
Thunder, WR Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf, Germany 53,109 June 14, 2003 World Bowl XI Frankfurt Galaxy 35 – 16 Rhein Fire Jonas Lewis
Galaxy, RB Hampden Park, Glasgow, United Kingdom 28,138 June 12, 2004 World Bowl XII Berlin Thunder 30 – 24 Frankfurt Galaxy Eric McCoo
Thunder, RB Arena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen, Germany 35,413 [2][3] June 11, 2005 World Bowl XIII Amsterdam Admirals 27 – 21 Berlin Thunder Kurt Kittner
Admirals, QB LTU arena, Düsseldorf, Germany 35,134 May 27, 2006 World Bowl XIV Frankfurt Galaxy 22 – 7 Amsterdam Admirals Butchie Wallace
Galaxy, RB LTU arena, Düsseldorf, Germany 36,286 June 23, 2007 World Bowl XV Hamburg Sea Devils 37 – 28 Frankfurt Galaxy Casey Bramlet
Sea Devils, QB Commerzbank-Arena, Frankfurt, Germany 48,125 Team Won Played Winning years Runner-up years Frankfurt Galaxy 4 8 1995, 1999, 2003, 2006 1996, 1998, 2004, 2007 Berlin Thunder 3 4 2001, 2002, 2004 2005 Rhein Fire 2 5 1998, 2000 1997, 2002, 2003 Barcelona Dragons 1 4 1997 1991, 1999, 2001 Amsterdam Admirals 1 3 2005 1995, 2006 Scottish Claymores 1 2 1996 2000 Hamburg Sea Devils 1 1 2007 London Monarchs 1 1 1991 Sacramento Surge 1 1 1992 Orlando Thunder 0 1 1992 Cologne Centurions 0 0 Birmingham Fire 0 0 San Antonio Riders 0 0 Montreal Machine 0 0 New York/New Jersey Knights 0 0 Raleigh–Durham Skyhawks 0 0 Ohio Glory 0 0 Results by country[edit] City No. hosted Years hosted Düsseldorf 4 1999, 2002, 2005, 2006 Frankfurt 3 1998, 2000, 2007 Amsterdam 2 1995, 2001 London 1 1991 Montreal 1 1992 Edinburgh 1 1996 Barcelona 1 1997 Glasgow 1 2003 Gelsenkirchen 1 2004

While the Olympic stadiums in Montreal, Amsterdam and Barcelona hosted World Bowls, the league never selected Berlin as a host town, though the city's Thunder played in the Olympiastadion from 2003 to 2007.

Other uses of "World Bowl"[edit]

The former World Football League, a short-lived 1970s competitor to the NFL, was the first to name its championship game the World Bowl. In World Bowl I, the only WFL World Bowl contested, the Birmingham Americans defeated the Florida Blazers 22–21 on December 5, 1974, at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama. The game had been scheduled to be played at the Gator Bowl Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, but after the Jacksonville Sharks folded mid-season, the league decided that the team with the better record would host the game.

The proposed World Indoor Football League that was to begin play in 1988 also intended on calling its championship the World Bowl. It would have been played on August 29, 1988. However, the WIFL disbanded 11 days before its season was to begin.


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