1994 Shreveport Pirates season explained

Team:Shreveport Pirates
Year:1994
Record:3–15
Division Place:6th, East
Owner:Bernard Glieberman and Lonnie Glieberman
General Manager:J. I. Albrecht
Coach:John Huard (released during training camp), Forrest Gregg
Stadium:Independence Stadium
Playoffs:did not qualify
Uniform:Image:CFL Jersey SHV 1994.png
No Prevseason:true

The 1994 Shreveport Pirates season was the first season in the teams franchise history. They finished last place in the East division with a 3–15 record and failed to make the playoffs.

Offseason

During the 1993 season, Bernie Glieberman was the owner of the Ottawa Rough Riders franchise. The city refused to renegotiate the terms of the lease for Frank Clair Stadium and Glieberman threatened to move the franchise. Instead, Glieberman sold the franchise to local businessman Bruce Firestone.[1] Glieberman was offered the opportunity to start a new franchise and the Shreveport Pirates were born.[1] His son Lonie was named team president and the Gliebermans were leased Independence Stadium at a 10-year lease for $2,500 a game.[2] Lonie Glieberman boasted that the Pirates would be the first US based CFL franchise to win the Grey Cup.[2]

Training camp

The Pirates first training camp was meant to be on the grounds at Louisiana State University. Instead, there was a scheduling error and the Pirates were forced to hold their training camp on the grounds of the Louisiana State Fair.[3] The players were housed in a large barracks style room that housed 12 to 18 players, and were on the second level, while animals were on the first level.[3] Pirates player Joe Mero would book a nearby hotel room at his own expense.[4] Head coach John Huard was the former football coach at the Maine Maritime Academy and he would be fired during training camp. An incident occurred where Huard berated a volunteer athletic therapist. The therapist left training camp and Huard was released from his coaching duties.[4] Huard was replaced by NFL Hall of Famer and former Cincinnati Bengals and Toronto Argonauts head coach Forrest Gregg. Gregg convinced the Gliebermans to remove the Vice President of Operations and the General Manager.[5]

Preseason

GameDateOpponentResultsVenueAttendance
ScoreRecord
AFri, June 24vs. Baltimore CFLersL 18–330–1Independence Stadium19,000
BTue, June 28at Toronto ArgonautsL 1–240–2Skydome12,712

Regular season

Despite the losing, Shreveport averaged a respectable attendance of 17,871 fans per game.[6] The Pirates set a CFL record with the longest losing streak in history (14 consecutive losses).[5]

Schedule

WeekGameDateOpponentResultsVenueAttendance
ScoreRecord
11 Wed, July 6at Ottawa Rough RidersL 10–400–1Frank Clair Stadium18,134
22Sat, July 16vs. Toronto ArgonautsL 34–350–2Independence Stadium20,634
33Sat, July 23at Baltimore CFLersL 24–400–3Memorial Stadium31,172
44Sat, July 30vs. Edmonton EskimosL 10–240–4Independence Stadium17,434
55Fri, Aug 5at Hamilton Tiger-CatsL 15–380–5Ivor Wynne Stadium12,612
66Sat, Aug 13vs. Las Vegas PosseL 13–490–6Independence Stadium18,011
77Sat, Aug 20vs. Hamilton Tiger-CatsL 26–300–7Independence Stadium14,364
88Sat, Aug 27at BC LionsL 15–670–8BC Place20,398
99Sat, Sept 3vs. Baltimore CFLersL 16–280–9Independence Stadium16,332
1010Sat, Sept 10at Las Vegas PosseL 21–340–10Sam Boyd Stadium9467
1111Sat, Sept 17at Sacramento Gold MinersL 3–560–11Hornet Stadium13,747
1212Sat, Sept 24vs. Saskatchewan RoughridersL 11–290–12Independence Stadium15,502
1313Sat, Oct 1at Winnipeg Blue BombersL 21–390–13Winnipeg Stadium20,426
1414Sat, Oct 8vs. Winnipeg Blue BombersL 22–380–14Independence Stadium14,088
1515Sun, Oct 16vs. Sacramento Gold MinersW 24–121–14Independence Stadium12,465
1616Fri, Oct 21at Calgary StampedersL 8–521–15McMahon Stadium21,317
1717Fri, Oct 28at Toronto ArgonautsW 29–272–15Skydome20,328
1818Fri, Nov 4vs. Ottawa Rough RidersW 28–243–15Independence Stadium32,011
[6]

Awards and honors

External links

Notes and References

  1. Weird Facts about Canadian Football, p.77, Overtime Books, First Printing 2009,
  2. Weird Facts about Canadian Football, p.78, Overtime Books, First Printing 2009,
  3. Weird Facts about Canadian Football, p.193, Overtime Books, First Printing 2009,
  4. Weird Facts about Canadian Football, p.194, Overtime Books, First Printing 2009,
  5. Weird Facts about Canadian Football, p.195, Overtime Books, First Printing 2009,
  6. Web site: 1994 Shreveport Pirates (CFL) - Pro Football Archives.