1992 WLAF
In 1992, fortunes changed and none of the European teams had winning seasons. Despite this, the European fans remained loyal, but the NFL owners suspended the WLAF after the season. Paul Tagliabue mentioned plans bring it back with only European teams, possibly in 1994. British sports writer Matt Tench cited "an ambivalence on the part of the NFL owners: they wanted a spring league but did not want to create a rival to the NFL. In the end they did not create enough of a rival. The Sacramento and San Antonio franchises left the WLAF after the 1992 season, and were set to join the Canadian Football League in 1993. San Antonio folded prior to the season but the Sacramento Gold Miners did play in the CFL for three years, starting the CFL USA initiative created in the wake of the WLAF's suspension. 1992 was the second of 15 seasons for the World League of Amercan Football. It was a very competitive season as 6 of the teams won six or more games. The power had shifted from the European teams to the North American teams. The European Division was won by the Barcelona Dragons, despite having a 5-5 record. The Orlando Thunder won the North American Eastern Division, while the Sacramento Surge would take the North American Western Division. In the playoffs, the Orlando Thunder crushed the Birmingham Fire 45-7, while the Sacramento Surge would squeak by the Barcelona Dragons 17-15 to set up the match-up for the 1992 World Bowl. World Bowl '92 was the second championship game, played on Saturday, June 6, 1992 at Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in front of 43,789 fans. The Surge won the game, 21–17, behind quarterback David Archer's MVP performance (22 completions of 33 attempts for 286 yards, two touchdowns and one interception). The game would be the only World Bowl involving two North American-based WLAF teams, as well as the only World Bowl played on North American soil. It would also be the last game either team would play, and the last WLAF game until 1995 as the league sought to restructure.
WLAF 1992
Product Code
New
Product Condition
Details
Reviews
Featured Products
1920 APFA
$10.00
Welcome to the 1920 American Professional Football Association, the predecessor to the National Football...
1975 WFL
$10.00
1975 was the last of two seasons for the World Football League. Due to financial difficulties, there...
1951 NFL
$10.00
Prior to the season, Baltimore Colts owner Abraham Watner faced financial difficulties, and thus gave...
1982 NFL
$10.00
A 57-day-long players' strike reduced the 1982 season from a 16-game schedule per team to an abbreviated...
1983 NFL
$10.00
In 1983, division winners in the AFC were Miami in the East, Pittsburgh in the Central, and Los Angeles...
2012 NFL
$10.00
In 2012, division winners in the AFC were New England in the East, Baltimore in the North, Houston in...
2006 NFL
$10.00
In 2006, division winners in the AFC were New England in the East, Baltimore in the North, Indianapolis...
1920 CFL
$10.00
While football had resumed in 1919 with the end of World War I, no Grey Cup / Dominion Championship had...
1926 CFL
$10.00
In 1926, Canadian Football consisted of 4 separate leagues, which only competed within its own league...
2010 GFL
$10.00
2010 was dominated by the top four teams in the German Football League, as there were only four teams...
ALL-AFC
$25.00
AFC ALL-FRANCHISE This is the AFC All-Franchise Team Data Disk, in which all of the greatest players...
2021 GFL
$10.00
2021 GFL Once again in 2021, the German Football League was very top-heavy, as both division winners...