Detroit Wheels
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- This article is about the football team. For the 1960s band Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels, see Mitch Ryder.
The Detroit Wheels were an American football team, a charter member of the ill-fated World Football League.
The Wheels were founded December 13, 1973 by ten investors, whose numbers eventually grew to a racially-mixed group of 33 members, including singer Marvin Gaye, Motown Records vice-president Esther Edwards, and pizza maker (and future Red Wings and Tigers owner) Mike Ilitch. Problems for the new team began when they were unable to sign any of their draft picks, then were shut out of using Tiger Stadium, home of the NFL Detroit Lions. Finally, the Wheels signed a deal to play at Eastern Michigan University's Rynearson Stadium in Ypsilanti, Michigan, some 37 miles from downtown Detroit.
Things weren't too encouraging on the field, either. The Wheels had a decent quarterback in Bubba Wyche (brother of NFL quarterback and later coach Sam Wyche), but little in the way of protection (he was sacked eleven times in one game) or receivers. Just 10,631 people attended their first home game, and their final game in Ypsilanti drew only 6,351 fans to tiny Rynearson Stadium. One home game, against the Portland Storm, was moved to London, Ontario, of all places (the Storm owner was from London); nevertheless, the Wheels lost again in front an announced crowd of 5,105.
Finally, after losing their first ten games (half the projected twenty-game season), the Wheels got their only win, 15-14, over the Florida Blazers in Orlando. On September 24, the Wheels would face the New York Stars in Downing Stadium, losing 37-7 in what would prove to be the Stars' last game before the franchise was shifted to Charlotte. After a 14-11 loss to the Shreveport Steamers (nee Houston Texans), the Wheels (and the equally struggling Jacksonville Sharks) folded for good. Actually, the team wasn't quite as bad as their 1-13 record indicated: eight of their losses came by less than a touchdown, and they held fourth-quarter leads in seven contests. (The fact that they had to play league champion Birmingham, runner-up Florida, Western Division champ Southern California and the 17-3 Memphis Southmen twice each probably didn't help, either.)
Stan Hansen, the professional wrestler, had a brief stint as a player with the Wheels that lasted only a few days. Nevertheless, he was promoted as a "former star" of the team when wrestling in a promotion in his hometown of Amarillo, Texas. [1]
[edit] 1974 Detroit Wheels schedule and results
Wed 10 July: Memphis 34, Detroit 15 (at Memphis; attendance 30,122)
Wed 17 July: Florida 18, Detroit 15 (at Ypsilanti; 10,631)
Sun 21 July: Hawaii 36, Detroit 16 (at Honolulu; 10,080)
Wed 31 July: Birmingham 21, Detroit 18 (at Ypsilanti; 14,614)
Wed 7 August: Birmingham 28, Detroit 22 (at Birmingham; 40,637)
Wed 14 August: Memphis 37, Detroit 7 (at Ypsilanti; 14,424)
Thu 22 August: Chicago 35, Detroit 22 (at Ypsilanti; 10,300)
Wed 28 August: Philadelphia 27, Detroit 23 (at Philadelphia; 15,100)
Mon 2 September: Portland 18, Detroit 7 (at London, Ontario; 5,105)
Fri 6 September: Southern California 10, Detroit 7 (at Ypsilanti; 6,351)
Wed 11 September: Detroit 15, Florida 14 (at Orlando; 11,511)
Wed 18 September: Southern California 29, Detroit 24 (at Anaheim; 22,143)
Tue 24 September: New York 37, Detroit 7 (at New York; 4,220)
Wed 2 October: Shreveport 14, Detroit 11 (at Shreveport, LA; 22,012) [originally scheduled for Ypsilanti against the Houston Texans]
Wed 9 October: Detroit at Chicago (cancelled)
Wed 16 October: Hawaii at Detroit (cancelled)
Wed 23 October: Detroit at Houston (cancelled)
Wed 30 October: Detroit at Jacksonville (cancelled)
Wed 6 November: New York at Detroit (cancelled)
Wed 13 November: Philadelphia at Detroit (cancelled)