Baltimore Stallions

Baltimore Stallions
Team logo
Founded1994
Folded1995
Based inBaltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Home fieldMemorial Stadium
Head coachDon Matthews
General managerJim Popp
Owner(s)Jim Speros
DivisionEast (1994)
South (1995)
ColorsRoyal blue, silver, black, and white
       
Grey Cup wins1 (1995)
Uniform

The Baltimore Stallions (known officially as the "Baltimore Football Club" and previously as the "Baltimore CFL Colts" in its inaugural season) were a Canadian Football League team based in Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States, which played the 1994 and 1995 seasons. They were the most successful American team in the CFL's southern expansion into the United States, and by at least one account, the most winning expansion team in North American professional sports history at the time.[1] They had winning records in each season, and in both years advanced to the championship game. In 1995, they became the only American franchise to win the Grey Cup.

In the final weeks of the Stallions' second season, it became public knowledge that the Maryland Stadium Authority and City of Baltimore were in serious negotiations with Art Modell, the long-time owner of the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League, (NFL) to move his franchise to Baltimore for the 1996 season. The Stallions ownership group knew they had no reasonable prospect of successfully competing with the overwhelmingly more popular brand in their home country. Even before the agreement with Modell became official within a month of the Stallions' Grey Cup triumph, Stallions owner Jim Speros was actively seeking to re-locate his team elsewhere. Speros ultimately chose to move his football organization to Montreal, reconstituting itself as the third and current iteration of the Montreal Alouettes. The Stallions franchise was dissolved, thus becoming one of three Grey Cup champions in the modern era to subsequently fold (the others being the Ottawa Rough Riders and the original Alouettes). The CFL considers the Stallions to be a separate franchise from the Alouettes.

  1. ^ Symonds, William C. (December 3, 1995). "Canadian Football Is Running Out Of Plays". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved August 13, 2013.