Monsters of the Midway

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The "Monsters of the Midway" is most widely known as the nickname for the National Football League's Chicago Bears — particularly the dominant teams of 1940 and 1941. The name underwent something of a revival when the 1985 edition of the Bears proved to be similarly dominant.

The nickname Monsters of the Midway was originally applied to the University of Chicago "Maroons", a strong college football team under the leadership of Amos Alonzo Stagg. "Midway" is a reference to the Midway Plaisance, a long, green swath of boulevard space bordering the southern end of the campus between 59th and 60th streets and running from Jackson Park to Washington Park on Chicago's South Side (E 59th Street and S Woodlawn Ave, Chicago, IL 60637). The U of C decided to drop its football program in 1939, about the time when the Bears became dominant in the NFL by beating the Packers every year; the tag was appropriated by the Bears, even though their home turf was Wrigley Field on the North Side of the city (roughly 12 miles from the Midway). (They also borrowed the "C" symbol on their helmets from the U of C Maroons.)[citation needed] The moniker is also used by the university's Velo Club bicycle racing team, for their annual criterium, which takes place in May on the Midway.

The team which has now become the NFL's Arizona Cardinals, who were originally the Racine Normals (named for the street on the South Side of Chicago where they played; the team eventually became the Chicago Cardinals), received their first uniforms as hand-me-downs from the University of Chicago. The faded maroon was fancied by the club's president to be a "cardinal" red color, so the team adopted "Cardinals" as its nickname. Through the years, the Cardinals were typically overshadowed by the Bears. Had the Chicago Cardinals enjoyed the success of their crosstown rivals, perhaps they would have inherited the nickname "Monsters" from the Maroons and not just their jerseys.

"Monsters of the Midway" was revived for the dominant Chicago Bears defense of 1985. That year the Bears went 15-1 in the regular season. In the playoffs the Bears posted two shutouts against the New York Giants (21-0) and the Los Angeles Rams (24-0). This culminated in the Super Bowl, wherein they defeated the New England Patriots 46-10. The 1985 Bears defense was ranked first in the NFL in points allowed and also yards allowed.

TSR also published a game entitled "Monsters of the Midway" in a 1982 edition of their magazine The Dragon. It was a football simulation with various fantasy characters taking the place of football players.

The game Mutant League Football referenced the name, calling one of its fictional teams the "Midway Monsters".