Vermont Bucks Explained

Vermont Bucks
Founded:2016
City:Burlington, Vermont
Misc:vermontbucksfootball.com
Owner:Joanna Morse
Coach:Jeff Porter
League:
Team History:
  • Vermont Bucks (2017, 2019–2020)
No League Champs:1
League Champs:
  • Can-Am: 2017
No Conf Champs:0
No Div Champs:1
Div Champs:
  • Can-Am: 2017
No Playoff Appearances:1
Playoff Appearances:
  • Can-Am: 2017
Arena Years:
Folded:2021

The Vermont Bucks were an indoor football team based in Vermont. They started as a charter member of the professional Can-Am Indoor Football League (Can-Am), playing home games at Gutterson Fieldhouse in Burlington in the 2017 season. The Can-Am then announced it was merging into the American Arena League with the Bucks one of the inaugural members for the 2018 season. By January 31, 2018, the original Vermont Bucks folded after an ownership change. Another ownership group then acquired the brand and launched a semi-professional team in 2019, but did not have a home arena. They joined the Southern Steam's Elite Indoor Football for the 2020 season with home games at Collins-Perley Sports Complex in St. Albans, Vermont, but did not play due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

History

The Bucks were announced as an expansion team on July 8, 2016, as part of the 2017 season in American Indoor Football (AIF).[1] However, the league then folded on July 18, 2016.[2] Bucks owner Tim Viens, a businessman, former Camping World Truck Series auto racer and placekicker at Glenville State College, began negotiations with the Arena Developmental League and the proposed Supreme Indoor Football (both of which are based in the southeastern United States) about joining for the 2017 season.[3] In August 2016, the Can-Am Indoor Football League was created and listed the Bucks as one of its inaugural teams; the CAN-AM League features teams centered mostly in the northeastern U.S.[4] The Bucks won all but one game in the Can-Am league, their lone loss coming to the Boston Blaze, a traveling team that Tim Viens also owned. Both the Bucks and the Blaze then were scheduled to meet in the Eastern Division championship, however, Viens then announced the Bucks would play the non-league semi-professional Central Penn Chargers for the division title.[5] The Bucks would defeat the Chargers 46–6 to meet the undefeated Rochester Kings in the Can-Am championship.[6] The Bucks then beat the undefeated Kings in Rochester by a score of 61–41.

Viens announced via Facebook in April 2017 that the team was in negotiations with another league for the 2018 season; he announced that Arena Pro Football and the Can-Am would merge for 2018 to create the American Arena League (AAL).[7]

After the 2017 season, Viens launched another team in the AAL called the Atlanta Havoc. He then sold the Bucks to an ownership group composed of Thomas Sturgis and Kyle Jennings of Exeter, New Hampshire, and Ron Lotti of Boston. However, in January 2018, the new ownership notified the AAL they would not participate in the 2018 season.[8]

In June 2018, an organization called Vermont Bucks Professional Arena Football, LLC began attempts at fundraising and a return for a semi-professional team in 2019. They were announced as team in the developmental New England Arena League (NEAL), a league that plays all its games in one location near Boston, for the 2019 season.[9] [10] After one season, the Bucks announced they were joining Elite Indoor Football (EIF), another semi-professional league, for 2020 with three or four homes games at Collins-Perley Sports Complex in St. Albans, Vermont.[11] [12] The Bucks did not play any EIF games during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and the Bucks continued to be listed as EIF members on the league website,[13] but the team appears to be inactive and has since been removed from the league site.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Pro indoor football team coming to Vermont . . July 8, 2016.
  2. Web site: American Indoor Football League Ceases Operations . OurSports Central . July 18, 2016.
  3. News: Vermont Bucks forced to find new league . Burlington Free Press . July 18, 2016.
  4. Web site: CAN-AM Teams . CAN-AM Indoor Football League . August 17, 2016.
  5. Web site: Vermont Bucks to Play Central Penn Chargers, Not Boston Blaze, in East Division Playoff . My Champlain Valley.com . May 21, 2017.
  6. Web site: Vermont Bucks smother Central Penn for East Division crown . . June 4, 2017.
  7. Web site: WEEKLY SPORTS LEAGUE & FRANCHISE REPORT . OurSports Central . April 17, 2017 . April 17, 2017.
  8. Web site: Bucks' Season Cancelled . . February 1, 2018.
  9. Web site: January 26 New England Arena League Facebook post . January 26, 2019 . Facebook.com.
  10. Web site: The Mighty Bucks: Pro-Football Dreams Lead Vermonters to a Humble Arena . Seven Days . June 12, 2019.
  11. Web site: VERMONT'S ARENA FOOTBALL TEAM RELOCATES TO RAIL CITY . County Courier . September 19, 2019.
  12. Web site: Vermont Bucks Football . VTBucksFootball . July 9, 2021.
  13. Web site: Elite Indoor Football Home Page . https://web.archive.org/web/20210715011253/https://www.eiffootball.com/ . EIF . July 15, 2021.