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The 1960 American Football League Season and the  . . .

 First
American Football League
CHAMPIONS

 

The ORIGINAL EIGHT: 1960

 

Eastern Division

 
Boston Patriots Buffalo Bills Houston Oilers Titans of New York

 
 

Western Division

 
Denver Broncos Dallas Texans Los Angeles Chargers Oakland Raiders

Helmet images courtesy of Klaus Gebhard

 

          So: what was the quality of players in the American Football league in its first year?  The NFL-oriented media often proclaims that the AFL didn't achieve parity until after the "merger" and the common draft.  But there were two 1960 All-AFL players who were eventually named to the "pro football" Hall of Fame: the Chargers' Ron Mix and the Raiders' Jim Otto. There were four who were on the World Champion Jets team.  Further, there were several who would be in the Hall of Fame if "fairness" were a concept understood by the selectors: Lionel Taylor, Jack Kemp, Paul Lowe, Abner Haynes, Sherrill Headrick, and Goose Gonsoulin. 
          Just as revealing are the names of some of the great American Football League players who didn't make that year's All-League team:  Johnny Robinson, Jim Hunt, Billy Cannon, Gino Cappelletti, Wayne Hawkins, and Hall of Famers Don Maynard and George Blanda.

 

         The first AFL game was played on a Friday night, September 9, 1960, in Boston.
The Broncos won, 13-10.  On the fiftieth anniversary of that game, Dick Friedman of Sports Illustrated wrote:
        
The pudgy little guy and his pal got off the streetcar on Commonwealth Ave. and headed toward the lights. At the ticket window they each plunked down $2.50, then took seats in the end zone. It was Sept. 9, 1960, they were nine years old and, to borrow a concept that the presidential candidate from their home state had introduced two months earlier at his party's convention, they stood on the edge of a new football frontier. That evening, at recently renovated Boston University Field (the former Braves Field), the American Football League would be inaugurated when the Boston Patriots faced the Denver Broncos.  . . . . . . .  Click HERE for more

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The first AFL Championship game was actually played in January, 1961.
The Oilers won, 24-16.

          The Oilers would appear in the first three AFL championships, and in a total of four.  Below are members of the first AFL Champions.


TONY BANFIELD

       Tony Banfield was an original Houston Oiler.  A defensive back, he played colleg footbal at OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY, and played professionally in the American Football League for the Oilers from 1960 through 1963, and in 1965.  In 1962, he returned a blocked punt 58 yards for a touchdown in the Oilers' 32 - 17 defeat of the Oakland Raiders. He was an American Football League All-Star in 1961, 1962 and 1963, and played in the first three AFL Championship games, winning the title in 1960 and 1961.

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GEORGE BLANDA

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RealPatch10Year.gif (2119 bytes)George Blanda was an "NFL reject". Yeah, right!!          Just like George Washington was a 'British reject'!  The NFL Bears thought the University of Kentucky's Blanda wasn't good enough to be a quarterback and wanted him to be a place kicker only. But in 1960, the formation of the American Football League led to Blanda's signing by the Houston Oilers as a quarterback and kicker. He went on to lead the Oilers to the first two league titles in AFL history, and he won AFL Player of the Year honors in 1961. Blanda once passed for 7 TDs in one game, and 36 in a season, 1961. For three staight years, 1963 through 1965, he led the league in pass attempts and completions.

         Blanda was in the top ten for attempts, completions, yards and touchdowns for seven straight years.  He was a four-time member of the American Football League All-Star team. He had two 400-yard passing days for the Oilers: a 464-yard effort against the Buffalo Bills on October 29, 1961, with four touchdown passes (winning 28-16); and 418 yards three weeks later against the Titans of New York, this time with seven touchdown passes in a 49-13 victory. 
          In 1967, when Blanda was almost 40, he left the Oilers but the Oakland Raiders saw him as a contributing backup passer and a dependable kicker, so they picked him up. At Oakland, he was a clutch kicker and a valuable "reliever" who pulled games out if fellow Hall of Famer Daryle Lamonica was unavailable or ineffective.
  He went on to become the oldest quarterback to start a title game, and the oldest pro football player, with the longest career, 26 years. He remains a strong supporter of the AFL heritage, recently saying: "That first year, the Houston Oilers or Los Angeles Chargers (24-16 losers to the Oilers in the title game) could have beaten the NFL champion (Philadelphia) in a Super Bowl," Blanda further said: "I think the AFL was capable of beating the NFL in a Super Bowl game as far back as 1960 or '61. I just regret we didn't get the chance to prove it."
          Blanda was one of only 20 players to play all ten years of the AFL and one of only three who were in every regular season AFL game their teams played, 140 straight.   He is the placekicker on the All-time All-AFL Team.   Blanda is also in the University of Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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BILLY CANNON

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RealPatch10Year.gif (2119 bytes)Billy Cannon, the All-American and 1959 Heisman Trophy winner from Louisiana State University, was one of the American Football League's most celebrated combatants. He had an uncommon combination of brute strength with the speed of a sprinter. In 1960, his signing by the Houston Oilers followed a fierce bidding war that began when Oilers owner Bud Adams met Cannon in the end zone following LSU's Sugar Bowl victory, and ended in court, with the AFL winning against the NFL. That put the fledgling league on the football map. Cannon, at halfback, scored an 88-yard touchdown on a pass from George Blanda in the first AFL Championship game, a 24-16 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers. He scored the only touchdown in the Oilers’ repeat victory over the (San Diego) Chargers in the second-ever AFL Championship game.

         Cannon amassed 2,043 all-purpose yards in 1961, and led the league in rushing. He played for the Oilers from 1960 through 1963 and went to the Oakland Raiders in 1964. Al Davis converted him to a tight end during the 1964 season, and he finished his career as one of the best players of all time at that position.  Cannon made the AFL All-star team as a halfback in 1961, and as a tight end in 1969.  In 1967, he scored 10 touchdowns receiving. He scored 64 touchdowns in his career, 47 of them receiving. He played in a total of six American Football League Championship games, winning twice with the Oilers and once with the Raiders. Cannon is one of twenty players who played the entire ten years of the American Football League.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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DON FLOYD

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       Don Floyd was a wiry defensive lineman who earned All-America honors at Texas Christian University and stayed in Texas for his professional career.   He was a draft choice of the American Football League's Houston Oilers in 1960, the league's first year, and was selected as a defensive end on the American Football League All-Star team in 1961, 1962 and 1963. In the early 1960s, Floyd was among the best.   Lining up primarily as a defensive end, he used a combination of strength and speed to establish a presence to be accounted for by the opposition on every play.
       Floyd played in four American Football League Championships, helping the Oilers win the league's first two titles in 1960 and 1961.    Don Floyd is on the Oilers' All-Time Team.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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CHARLIE HENNIGAN

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Click HERE for more

AFL Standard Contract

       Charlie Hennigan, from Louisiana's  Northwestern State University, joined the Houston Oilers in their first year, 1960, after having worked as a schoolteacher.  He scored the first touchdown in Oilers history, but played in only 11 games. After a promising rookie season, in 1961 he started all 14 games and established himself as a superstar in the American Football League by gaining 1,746 yards receiving, a record that stood for 34 years. One of quarterback George Blanda’s main targets, Hennigan was the first professional football player to catch more than a hundred passes in a single season (101 in 1964) and to twice gain over 1,500 yards in pass receiving (1961 and 1964).
           He holds the all-time records for most games (3) in a season with over 200 yards receiving, and most games (11) in a season with over 100 yards receiving.  Hennigan had the All-time AFL single game record of 272 yards receiving, against the Boston Patriots on October 16, 1961. He was an American Football League All-Star five straight years, 1961 through 1965, and is a member of the All-Time All-AFL second team.  He went on to a successful career with a doctorate in Education, and as a motivational guru with his Hennigan Institute.

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A member of the
American Football League Hall of Fame

Guitar presented to Charlie Hennigan's son Steve, inscribed by George Blanda's son George, in commemoration of Charlie Hennigan's record-breaking 101 receptions in 1964.

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JIM NORTON

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        Jim Norton of the University of IDAHO signed as an original Houston Oiler in 1960.  Although he intercepted only one pass in his first year, he went on to become the American Football League’s all-time interception leader. During his first starting season, in 1961, he snared nine passes and punted with a 40.7 yard average. In a tight defensive duel in the AFL title game, his four booming punts helped Houston beat the San Diego Chargers, 10-3.
       In 1962, nursing a slim half-game lead in the Eastern Division in Week 12 of the season, Norton personally tormented Denver quarterback Frank Tripucka.  Jim killed three Bronco drives with interceptions as the Oilers stole a 34-17 victory, eventually reaching the Championship Game for the third straight year.   That thriller for the AFL crown was the league's longest game, a double-overtime contest won by the Dallas Texans, 20-17.
       As a defensive back, Norton was a steady tackler with a nose for the football. His play earned him
American Football League All-Star honors for 1961, ‘62, ‘63, and again in 1967, when he scored the only touchdown of his career, returning an interception 56 yards. He played 126 consecutive regular-season games with the Oilers, every game of his nine years in the league, as well as four AFL Championship games.  His number 43 was retired by the Oilers, acknowledging his club-record 45 career interceptions and 519 punts.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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BOB TALAMINI

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       Bob Talamini, a stout, 6'1", 250-lb. lineman, earned third-team All-SEC honors at the University of Kentucky and was drafted by the Houston Oilers of the American Football League. He personally saw the league develop from the first Oilers training camp in 1960 to the day his second team, the Jets, knocked off the NFL's "unbeatable" Baltimore Colts in 1969.
       Hall of Famers George Blanda and Billy Cannon benefited from his blocking as the Oilers won the first two AFL Championships.   Talamini made first-team All-AFL in 1962 and was a regular at American Football League All-Star games, selected to six straight, through 1967.  He anchored an offensive line that gave Blanda time to set passing records that would last for decades and opened holes for the likes of Cannon, Charlie Tolar, Sid Blanks and Hoyle Granger to run through.   Talamini, Don Floyd and Jim Norton were the last of the original Oilers.    He was selected to the All-Time All-AFL second team.
       After two AFL crowns and three Eastern Division titles, Talamini watched the club rebuild and win the division again in 1967.  The Oilers fell one game short in 1967, but Talamini got to realize his dream the following year when he was released and picked up by the New York Jets. Opening holes for Matt Snell and blocking defenders away from Joe Namath, Bob played a vital role in the shocker that changed pro football forever, stuffing the Colts in the third World Championship Game.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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CHARLIE TOLAR

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      Charlie Tolar of Northwestern State University of Louisiana was an early American Football League star.  One of the most popular figures in the early days of the league, the 5-6, 210-pounder had dozens of nicknames, including "the Human Bowling Ball", and was named to AFL All-Star Teams in 1961, 1962 and 1963. Tolar helped Houston win the first American Football League championship in 1960 and repeat in 1961.  The team finished as runners-up in 1962, when he was the team's Offensive MVP as the first Oiler to exceed 1,000 yards rushing, with 1,012 on a league record 244 carries.   He is among the top ten all-time rushers in the American Football League, and was named to the Oilers' Thirtieth Anniversary Dream Team chosen by fans in 1989.  At Northwestern, Tolar was twice Gulf States Conference MVP and still holds four school records.

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A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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K. S. 'BUD' ADAMS, JR.

RealPatch10Year.gif (2119 bytes)Bud Adams was one of the original members of the "Foolish Club", eight men whose vision created the American Football League.  He and Lamar Hunt were the first to commit to the new League.  Adams helped establish the league by fighting and winning the battle with the NFL for LSU's All-American Heisman Trophy winner Billy Cannon.  His franchise, the Houston Oilers, appeared in four AFL championship games, including the first three, becoming the league's first champions in 1960, repeating in 1961, and losing the third championship game only after the classic 1962 double-overtime battle against the Dallas Texans
 

        Adams also was in the minority of AFL owners who believed that the American Football League should not merge with the NFL, as the AFL was turning the tide in the football wars; in the draft, in signings, and fan support.  He was one of four men who owned an AFL franchise for the entire ten years.

AFLHOF.gif (17340 bytes)

A member of the
American Football League
Hall of Fame

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