“If a man watches three football games in a row, he should be declared legally dead.” Erma Bombeck

Let’s see if you pay attention. I begin with the essential question which is this; what do the Bulldogs, Shamrocks, Redskins, Bears, Yanks and Patriots have in common? Now before you go off all willy nilly and start thinking this or that, pause, look about and then answer. Very good….Outstanding deductive reasoning will bring you to the correct answer. That’s right, they are all football teams. But more than that they are all professional football teams and even more than that, they are all professional football teams which called Fenway Park their home!

 Fenway… ready for football, 1933.

Fenway Park’s initial foray into pro football came in 1926. It was the first incarnation of the American Football League which was started by Red Grange, (he of galloping ghost fame).  The Boston Bulldogs did not last a season, going 2-4 in six games before disbanding. Their plan was to split home games between Fenway and Braves Field. They played one game at Fenway Park, a 13-0 loss to, the New York Yankees in October, does that seem serendipitous? The Pottsville Maroons (an NFL team) relocated to Boston and played their 1929 season as the Bulldogs, however, their home was Braves Field, not Fenway.

The Boston Redskins of the NFL arrived for their 1933 season. Founded as the Boston Braves in 1932, they played their home games at Braves Field. The move to Fenway brought a name change and the Boston Redskins, under Native American coach “Lone Star” Dietz, called Fenway Park home. The Redskins played in Boston through the 1936 season. Finishing that season as the Eastern Division Champs, they drew only 4,000 fans to Fenway on the next to last game of the season. Owner Preston Marshall was so infuriated at this lack of support, he surrendered home field advantage for the NFL Championship game and played the Packers in New York’s Polo Grounds. They lost 21-6 and Marshall packed up the team for Washington DC where they have thrived for nearly eight decades.

Boston Redskins running back Cliff Battles ran for 215 yards in a 21-10 win over the New York Giants at Fenway Park, October 8, 1933. He was the first NFL player to rush for 200 yards in a game.  Battles played for $175.00 per game.

The departure of the Redskins brought another stab at an AFL team. The Boston Shamrocks who played the 1936 season at Braves Field moved into Fenway Park for 1937. They lasted but one season going 2-5, both wins coming at Fenway. The football team left, but the Shamrock remained, becoming the symbol for the Boston Celtics, the most successful franchise in NBA history. Out with the Shamrocks, in with the Bears, with yet another AFL attempt to corner the Boston market. They lasted a year at Fenway before they also folded.

Despite four failed attempts at pro football in only 14 years, the NFL was not ready to give up on Boston as a home for one of its franchises. The Boston Yanks arrived in 1944. Called the Yanks because team owner Ted Collins was hoping for a Yankee Stadium home, he settled for Fenway Park where his team played for five seasons. Never enjoying a winning season, the Yanks became a casualty and were disbanded following the 1948 season.

It would be 15 years before pro football would return to Fenway Park with yet another incarnation of the American Football League. The brand new Boston Patriots, owned by Billy Sullivan, played their first two seasons at Boston University’s Nickerson Field (the old Braves Field). In 1963 they moved their home to Fenway Park, where they played until the end of the 1968 season. They won one AFL East title (1963) and in their six seasons of calling Fenway home, they played 39 games there, winning 17 of them. They left Fenway for Alumni Field (Boston College) and Harvard Stadium before settling in Foxboro Massachusetts in 1971 becoming the New England Patriots. Today they thrive as one of the NFL’s most successful franchises of the new millennium.

Fenway Park has not seen a football game of any type since the Boston Patriots defeated the Cincinnati Bengals 33-14 on December 1, 1968. Will Fenway ever again see the pigskin bantered about her lawn? I think that for her one hundredth birthday she should host another football game. For my money, make it a high school game.

          And so it was, pro football throughout Fenway Park history, 1926-1968

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About fenwaypark100

Hello and welcome, my name is Raymond Sinibaldi. A retired history teacher, after 26 years in the classroom, a baseball fan for three score and five, I have authored 13 books. Eight about baseball and her glorious history; most recently Yankees in the Hall of Fame and Dodgers in the Hall of Fame. An aficionado of the Kennedy Administration, I have written four books in that realm and also co-authored a book of motivational stories for coaches. The first, The Babe in Red Stockings which was co-authored with Kerry Keene and David Hickey and released in 1997. It is a chronicle of Babe's days with the Red Sox. We also penned a screenplay about Babe's Red Sox days so if any of you are Hollywood inclined or would like to represent us in forwarding that effort feel free to contact me. In 2012 we three amigos published Images of Fenway Park in honor of the 100th birthday of Fenway Park. That led to the creation of this blog. The following year, 2013 came my first solo venture, Spring Training in Bradenton and Sarasota. This is a pictorial history of spring training in those two Florida cities. The spring of 2014 brought forth the 1967 Red Sox, The Impossible Dream Season. The title speaks for itself, and it also is a pictorial history. Many of the photos in this book were never published before. The spring of 2015 brought 1975 Red Sox, American League Champions. Another pictorial effort, this will be about the Red Sox championship season of 1975 and the World Series that restored baseball in America. The spring of 2016 brought 61 Motivational Stories for Every Coach of Every Sport. My first JFK effort was in 2017 with John F Kennedy in New England, which was followed by JFK From Florida to the Moon (2019) and JFK At Rest in Arlington (2020). Jackie's Newport came about in 2019 and in 2023 came both Yankees in the Hall of Fame and Dodgers in the Hall of Fame. I was fortunate enough to consult with sculptor Franc Talarico on the “Jimmy Fund” statue of Ted Williams which stands outside both Fenway Park and Jet Blue Park Fenway South, in Fort Myers Florida. That story is contained in the near 300 posts which are contained herein. Throughout the years this blog has morphed from an exclusive Red Sox focus, to a broader baseball perspective to a blog about life, with baseball a large portion of it. This year, 2024, I have reactivated this blog which lay dormant for quite some time. Welcome aboard, pass the word and feel free to contact me about anything you read or ideas you may have for a topic. Email me at fenwaypark100@gmail.com.
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1 Response to “If a man watches three football games in a row, he should be declared legally dead.” Erma Bombeck

  1. Reblogged this on fenwaypark100 and commented:

    Have the Red Sox rubbed off on the Pats? Yikes I hope not!

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