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One of the most frequently asked questions is how a particular  
NFL team chose its name. Sometimes the answer is obvious and  
other times it is not so clear-cut. 
 
 
ARIZONA CARDINALS  
– The Cardinals originally played in Chicago  
as a charter member of the American Professional Football  
Association (APPA). The team moved to St. Louis in 1960 and then  
to Phoenix in 1988. Contrary to popular logic, the team was not  
named after the beautiful bird but instead because the team  
played in used maroon jerseys the original team (in pre-NFL  
years) had purchased from the University of Chicago. When an  
observer scoffed that the jerseys were “faded red,” team owner  
Chris O’Brien countered that they weren’t “faded red,”  
they were “cardinal red.”  
 
ATLANTA FALCONS 
– A fan contest was held and the team received  
more than 1,300 entries suggesting 558 different names.  
Although several entries in a fan contest suggested Falcons,  
a schoolteacher was declared the winner because of her reason  
“…the falcon is proud and dignified with great courage and fight.”  
 
BALTIMORE RAVENS  
– On March 29, 1996, Baltimore’s  
NFL team became the Ravens. The nickname was selected from  
among three finalists in a poll conducted by the Baltimore Sun.  
Baltimore fans selected the name in honor of Edgar Allan Poe,  
the American poet who penned his famous poem, “The Raven”  
while living in Baltimore.  
 
BUFFALO BILLS  
– Buffalo’s team in the All-America Football  
Conference (AAFC) in 1946 was the Bisons. In 1947 a contest  
was held to rename the team, which was owned by James Breuil  
of the Frontier Oil Company. The winning entry suggested Bills,  
reflecting on the famous western frontiersman, Buffalo Bill Cody.  
Carrying the “frontier” theme further, the winning contestant  
further offered that the team was being supported by  
Frontier Oil and was “opening a new frontier in sports in  
Western New York.” When Buffalo joined the new American  
Football League in 1960, the name of the city’s earlier pro  
football entry was adopted.  
 
CAROLINA PANTHERS 
– Team owner Jerry Richardson’s son Mark is  
responsible for the selection of Panthers as the team name.  
Mark, who felt that there should be some “synergy” between  
the name and the team colors also suggested the team colors of  
black, blue and silver.  
 
CHICAGO BEARS  
– When this team became  
a charter member of the American Professional Football  
Association (APFA) in 1920, the team was located in Decatur,  
IL, and was named after team sponsor, the Staley Starch  
Company. The team moved to Chicago in 1921 and became the  
Chicago Staleys. In 1922, after team founder-manager and star  
end George Halas purchased the team, he changed the name to the  
Bears. Halas reasoned that because football players were  
generally bigger than baseball players, and the city’s  
baseball team was the Cubs, then logically the football team  
should be the Bears.  
 
CINCINNATI BENGALS  
– Paul Brown selected the name because there had once been  
a pro football team in Cincinnati named the Bengals  
and adopting that name “would provide a link with past  
professional football in Cincinnati.\"  
 
CLEVELAND BROWNS  
– The Cleveland All-America Football  
Conference franchise conducted a fan contest in 1945 to name  
the team. The most popular submission was “Browns” in  
recognition of the team’s first coach and general manager Paul  
Brown, who was already a popular figure in Ohio sports. Brown  
at first vetoed the choice and the team selected from the  
contest entries the name “Panthers.” However, after an area  
businessman informed the team that he owned the rights to the  
name Cleveland Panthers, from an earlier failed football team,  
Brown rescinded his objection and agreed to the use of his name.  
 
DALLAS COWBOYS  
– In the initial months following the its  
formation, the Dallas team was known as the “Steers.” After a  
few weeks, however, the name was changed to “Rangers.” At the  
same time, a baseball team operated in Dallas under that name,  
but was scheduled to fold before the 1960 football season.  
However, when the baseball team decided to play one more  
season, Clint Murchison Jr. and Bedford Wynne, two owners of  
the new NFL team, selected the name of Cowboys to avoid  
confusion.  
 
DENVER BRONCOS  
– “Broncos” was the winning entry  
in a fan contest held in 1960 by the original AFL team. The  
football team, however, isn’t the first to be called the  
Denver Broncos. Denver’s 1921 entry in the Midwest Baseball  
League was also called the Broncos.  
 
DETROIT LIONS  
– The Lions name was chosen by George A.  
Richards, the Detroit radio executive who purchased the  
Portsmouth Spartans and moved the team to Detroit in 1934. 
“The lion is monarch of the jungle,” a team spokesperson said,  
“and we hope to be the monarch of the league.”  
 
GREEN BAY PACKERS  
– The name was a natural since  
the team was sponsored first by the Indian Packing Company and  
later the Acme Packing Company. Although both companies went  
out of business, the team prospered under the name Packers.  
 
HOUSTON TEXANS  
– After Houston was awarded the NFL\'s 32nd  
franchise on October 6, 1999, a series of focus groups were  
formed to help come up with a nickname for the team. On March  
2, 2000, the team announced five choices, the Apollos, Bobcats,  
Stallions, Texans and Wildcatters. The list was then shaved to  
the Apollos, Stallions and Texans a month later. After careful  
deliberation, the team unveiled the Texans\' name, colors, and  
logo at a rally held in downtown Houston on September 6, 2000.  
 
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS  
– Baltimore’s first pro football team was  
a member of the 1947 AAFC. A fan contest produced the Colts  
name reflecting the great tradition and proud history of horse  
breeding and racing in the Baltimore region. The original Colts  
disbanded after the 1950 season but the name was retained when  
a new Baltimore franchise began play in 1953. The team moved to  
Indianapolis in 1984.  
 
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS  
– The Jaguars name  
was selected through a fan contest. Finalists for the name  
included the Sharks, Stingrays and even Panthers, but Jaguars  
was ultimately selected on December 6, 1991. 
 
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS  
– The AFL franchise began in 1960 as the Dallas Texans. When  
the team was moved to Kansas City in 1963, the new name was  
selected by a fan contest.  
 
MIAMI DOLPHINS  
– A fan contest drew 19,843 entries to name  
the AFL expansion team. A total of 622 contestants suggested  
“Dolphins.” Team owner Joe Robbie said he liked the name  
because, “The dolphin is one of the fastest and smartest  
creatures in the sea.”  
 
MINNESOTA VIKINGS  
–Bert Rose, the first general manager of the Minnesota team that  
began NFL play in 1961, selected the Vikings name because so  
many people in Minnesota and the surrounding area traced their  
heritage to Scandinavia.  
 
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 
– The new AFL team originally located  
in Boston, was named the Patriots because of the area’s  
heritage as the birthplace of the American Revolution.  
 
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS  
– The name Saints was  
the popular choice in a fan contest staged by the New Orleans  
States-Item. However, with or without the contest, the New  
Orleans team would most likely have been called the Saints. The  
franchise was awarded on All Saints Day, November 1, 1966. New  
Orleans was famous worldwide as the city of jazz and the famous  
marching song, “When the Saints Go Marching In.”  
 
NEW YORK GIANTS  
– Owner Tim Mara “borrowed” the Giants name from the  
city’s Major League Baseball team of the same name. This was  
not unusual among early day pro football franchises. At one  
time or another there were NFL franchises named the New York  
Yankees, Brooklyn Dodgers, Cleveland Indians, Cincinnati Reds,  
and Detroit Tigers.  
 
NEW YORK JETS 
– New York’s original AFL  
team was called the Titans. When Sonny Werblin took over the  
franchise in 1963, he changed the team name to Jets to reflect  
the modern approach of his team and the star-studded  
performances he hoped his team would produce.  
 
OAKLAND RAIDERS  
– For a brief period, the new AFL team was known as the Senors  
but by the time the 1960 season started, the Oakland team was  
known as the Raiders. The origin of the Raiders name is not  
known but, since it is doubtful a fan contest would have been  
staged in Oakland since the first team would have to play in  
San Francisco, it is most likely the name was chosen by  
principal owner Chet Soda and his partners.  
 
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES  
– When Bert Bell established his NFL franchise in Philadelphia  
in 1933, the country was struggling to recover from the Great  
Depression. New president Franklin D. Roosevelt had introduced  
his “New Deal” program through the National Recovery  
Administration, which had the Eagle as its symbol. Since Bell  
hoped his franchise also was headed for a new deal, he picked  
Eagles as the team name.  
 
PITTSBURGH STEELERS  
– The original 1933 team was named the Pirates  
after the city’s major league baseball team. In 1940,  
Owner Art Rooney Sr. changed the team name to Steelers to  
more properly represent the city’s dominant steel industry.  
 
ST. LOUIS RAMS  
– The franchise was originated in Cleveland in 1936 as  
a member of the American Football League.  
In 1937 the team joined the NFL. Principal  
owner Homer Marshman and his general manager, Damon “Buzz”  
Wetzel picked the Rams name because Wetzel had said his  
favorite football team had always been the Fordham Rams and  
Marshman liked the sound of the name.  
 
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS  
– Barron Hilton agreed after his general manager, Frank Ready  
picked the Chargers name when he purchased an AFL franchise for  
Los Angeles. The Chargers played in Los Angeles in 1960 and  
moved to San Diego in 1961. “I liked it because they were  
yelling ‘charge’ and sounding the bugle at Dodgers Stadium  
and at USC games.”  
 
SAN FRANCISCO 49ers  
– The 49ers name was adopted when San Francisco obtained  
an AAFC franchise in 1946. The name was selected as  
a recognition of the pioneering and  
adventurous spirit of the men of the 1849 gold rush in the  
Sierra Nevada mountains east of San Francisco.  
 
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS  
– The nickname Seahawks was the result of a fan contest that  
drew 20,365 entries and suggested 1,742 different names.  
Seahawks was suggested by 151 entrants and judged by the team  
ownership as the best choice.  
 
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS  
– A team advisory board reviewed 400 name possibilities  
and selected Buccaneers.  
 
TENNESSEE TITANS  
– Originally located in Houston,  
the team was known as the Oilers. After playing two seasons as  
the Tennessee Oilers, team owner Bud Adams formed an advisory  
committee to research names and a “Guess the Name” contest to  
gain additional feedback was also held. The committee selected  
Titans citing the desire to have a nickname that reflected  
“strength, leadership and other heroic qualities.”  
 
WASHINGTON REDSKINS  
– George Preston Marshall acquired an NFL franchise  
in 1932 and named it the Boston Braves after the city’s Major  
League Baseball team. However, after a financially devastating  
and poorly attended season in 1932, Marshall abandoned the  
Braves name in favor of the Redskins. The Redskins name was  
retained when the team was moved to Washington in 1937.  
 
(copyright of NFL Hall of Fame. http://www.profootballhof.com/) |   
 
 
 
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