Buffalo (NFL)

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Buffalo All-AmericansBuffalo Bisons (NFL)
    and Buffalo Rangers all redirect to here.

Logos link for these early teams.
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Clockwise from top-left to bottom right:
Buffalo Bisons, Buffalo Rangers,
and All-Americans respectively.

Buffalo, New York had an early (turbulant) era National Football League team that operated under three different names and several different owners between 1920-1929 NFL seasons. The early NFL era franchise was variously called the Buffalo All-Americans from 1920-1923, Buffalo Bisons from 1924-1925, 1927 and 1929, and the Buffalo Rangers in 1926. The franchise, experiencing financial problems in 1928, did not participate in league play.

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The Buffalo All-Americans had success during its first couple of seasons, posting a 9-1-1 regular season record in 1920 where they became the first professional NFL team to win by margins of 20 or more points in each of it's first four games, an asterisked record which was not tied until the 2007 New England Patriots' offense duplicated the feat against other (all) professional and league teams on October 1st, 2007[1]; the asterisked record is because in the early NFL, the All-Americans played several non-league opponents in their first four wins in 1920.[2].

They next posted a 9-1-2 record in 1921, coming within one game of the league's championship that second year (which was awarded by a vote of the Association's executive committee in January of 1922) but as they split the season, losing their second game to the Chicago Staleys in their final game of the season.[1] [3] In their decision, based on the generally accepted rule that if two teams play each other more than once in a season, the second game counts more than the first, the executive committee followed established tradition. Despite their early strong showing, thereafter in the hard scrabble economy of the 1920s, the team struggled for the rest of its lifespan.

Thereafter, the team went through several owners and name changes, but nothing seemed to work. Finally, after failing to field a team in 1928, the original Buffalo franchise folded after the 1929 season. Tommy Hughitt was a player on the team in the early 20s.

The team has no relation with the Buffalo Bills of today which were one of the new AFL teams (formation announced in 1959) that first played in 1960.


Year W L T Finish Coach
All-Americans 1920 9 1 1 3rd Tommy Hughitt
1921 9 1 2 2nd Tommy Hughitt
1922 5 4 1 9th Tommy Hughitt
1923 5 4 3 9th Tommy Hughitt
Bisons 1924 6 5 0 9th Tommy Hughitt
1925 1 6 2 15th Walt Koppisch
Rangers 1926 4 4 2 9th Jim Kendrick
Bisons 1927 0 5 0 12th Dim Patterson
1928 Suspended Operations
1929 1 7 1 10th Al Jolley

  1. ^ Patriots at Bengals: Game notes (10-01-2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-02. “"According to the ESPN broadcast of tonight’s game, the Patriots are the first team since 1920 to win the first four games of a season by 20 or more points. The Patriots have won by 24, 24, 31 and 21 points in their four games this season. The last NFL team to win its first four games by 20 or more points was the 1920 Buffalo All-Americans."”
  2. ^ (2007-10-01) ESPN Monday Night Football broadcast, October 1st, 2007.
  3. ^ Who really won the championship in 1921? (p/o "History of Professional Football in Western New York"). Retrieved on 2007-10-02. “Since there were no championship games in 1921, the championship was decided by a vote of the Association's executive committee in January of 1922. The executive committee ruled that the Chicago Staleys were the champions, based on the generally accepted rule that if two teams play each other more than once in a season, the second game counts more than the first. Buffalo and Chicago played on Thanksgiving Day, with Buffalo winning 7-6. The second game was held December 4. This time, Chicago won 10-7. Buffalo claimed that the second game was just a post-season "exhibition" game, and it should not count in the final standings. Chicago claimed that the Association did not have a set date for the end of the season, therefore the second game could not have been held in the "post-season."”
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