Traveling team

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In professional team sports, a traveling team (also called a road team) is a member of a professional league that never or rarely competes in its home arena or stadium. This differs from a barnstorming team in that the latter does not compete within a league or association framework. While leagues may designate a traveling team prior to the start of competition, some teams simply become road teams by simply not scheduling any home games.

While the use of traveling teams has been sparing on the upper levels of professional sport, the National Football League had such road teams (such as the Hammond Pros, Oorang Indians, and Columbus Panhandles) in the formative years of the league. Other professional sports leagues on the major league level have employed traveling teams, the most recent being World Team Tennis, with The Russians nominally being based in Philadelphia.

[edit] Traveling teams in major professional American football

Below is a list of the traveling teams that were members of the National Football League or the first American Football League. No other major professional league of American football had such road teams, the last of such was the 1952 Dallas Texans of the National Football League. To qualify for the list, the team must have played a complete season of at least four games on the road. Teams that had the traveling team status imposed upon them in midseason are noted.[1]

The Canadian Football League has had only one road team, the Las Vegas Posse (a CFL USA team), which was converted into "road team" status for the last few weeks of the 1994 season. The team had drawn very poorly (less than 3,000 fans) in Las Vegas and was folded at the end of the season.


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