In the franchise’s first year as an NFL team, the Maroons “won” the NFL championship with a 10-2 record, capped with a victory over Chicago Cardinals. The NFL didn’t have playoffs back then, so the Maroons were named champions … for six days.
Bizarrely, Pottsville was stripped of its title after playing an unauthorized game against Notre Dame, a college power. Then the Cardinals scheduled "two hastily arranged games against weaker teams," according to a Pennsylvania newspaper, won both and improved their record to 11-2-1. The Cardinals, with the best record in the NFL, were declared champions.
As shady as that seemed, the ploy was allowed by the league, and the NFL still recognizes the Cardinals as the 1925 champions. After the 1928 season, the Maroons moved to Boston.
Providence (R.I.) Steam Roller (1925-1931)
Led by a stellar defense, the Steam Roller won the 1928 NFL title with an 8-1-2 record. The following season, Providence recorded three firsts, according to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. It played in a cycling venue—the sport was popular during the era—competed in four games in six days (going 0-3-1) and hosted the first night game in professional football history.
The night game was played at Providence's Kinsley Park Stadium, where floodlights had recently been installed. A local newspaper reported that the ball was painted white for the game against the Chicago Cardinals, giving the orb "the appearance of a large egg.” Added the newspaper: "There was a panicky feeling that the player who made the catch would be splattered with yellow yolk."
The night game, won 16-0 by Chicago, drew 6,000 fans, an impressive figure. But when home attendance plummeted in 1931, the franchise was turned over to the league and never played in Providence again.
Los Angeles Buccaneers (1926)
A Los Angeles team in name only, the Buccaneers spent their only NFL season as a traveling team. They were co-coached by their best players, the former University of California stars Talma "Tut" Imlay and Harold "Brick" Muller, who earned his nickname because of his flaming red hair. Most of the Bucaneers' players were from California. Despite not playing home games, Los Angeles finished with a respectable 6-3-1 record in 1926.
According to the Pittsburgh Daily Post, the team also played the first NFL game that featured “three all-time All-Americans” when it defeated the Canton Bulldogs, 16-13. The three All-Americans were Muller for the Bucs, and Jim Thorpe (running back) and Pete Henry (tackle) for the Bulldogs.
Dallas Texans (1952)
Following their only season in 1952, the Dallas Texans became the last NFL franchise to fold, following an especially ugly 1-11 season. The Texans, the league's first team in the Deep South, were co-owned by Giles Miller, 32, reportedly America's youngest millionaire, and his brother, Connell.
The Millers were rabid college football fans, but neither was ready to run a professional sports franchise, especially one bereft of talent. Midway through the season, the franchise was turned over to the NFL because of a "lack of funds," Connell's son wrote in a retrospective on the team for Texas Monthly magazine in 2019. And, during the season, the team was moved to Hershey, Pa. —the vagabond Texans won their only game on Thanksgiving Day, over the Chicago Bears in Akron, Ohio, before 3,000 fans.
In the last week of the season, head coach Jimmy Phelan canceled practice and told his players, “Men, I’m not telling you your paychecks aren’t any good, but if I were you guys, I’d run to the bank.”
In 1960, the Dallas Texans of the American Football League began play. The team moved to Kansas City in 1963 and eventually became part of the NFL.