Austin Wranglers

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This team has nothing to do with the Oklahoma Wranglers who played in the 2000 & 2001 AFL seasons.

Austin Wranglers
Austin Wranglers
Conference National
Division TBD
Year founded 2004
Home arena Frank Erwin Center
City, State Austin, Texas
Indoor football championships none


The Austin Wranglers are an American football team from Austin, Texas in the arenafootball2. They began play as a 2004 expansion team in the Arena Football League.

Contents

[edit] History

The Wranglers began play in February of 2004, and play home games at the Frank Erwin Center on the University of Texas campus, playing in the Southern Division of the National Conference. The franchise is not to be confused with another Arena Football team called the Oklahoma Wranglers, who played the 2000 and 2001 seasons in Oklahoma City.

In 2004, the Wranglers accumulated an 8-8 record with former ArenaBowl champion John Kaleo leading the roster. However, the Wranglers were unable to qualify for the playoffs, after losing 3 games to close the season.

In the 2004 off-season, Wranglers recruiting was relatively quiet; signings included former All-Rookie teamer OL/DL Bryan Henderson, OS Ira Gooch, and QB John Fitzgerald. Departed was former starting quarterback John Kaleo, traded to the Los Avengers for cash and future considerations. The trade was highly controversial amongst the Wranglers' fanbase, considering Kaleo accumulated solid numbers for the expansion Wranglers. It is highly believed the move was in regards to Kaleo's locker room behavior rather than on the field play. The training camp which ensued was headlined by the competition between free agent pick up John Fitzgerald, fresh off leading the expansion VooDoo to the playoffs, against 2004 back-up Bobby Pesavento. Pesavento would ultimately defeat Fitzgerald for the starting job, but Fitzgerald took over four games into the season when Pesavento was injured against the Tampa Bay Storm.

Throughout the season John Fitzgerald was one of a few bright spots on a depleted team. The Wranglers went down to a 6-10 record in 2005. Though many close games were played, 2 of which included a pair of 3-point losses to National Conference Champion, the Georgia Force.

Realizing the past failures in 2004 and 2005, the Wranglers management went out and had an explosive off-season. Team presidents Doug MacGregor and Glyn Milburn both made decisive re-signings and signings, in which included Sedrick Robinson, AFL all time leading tackler Damon Mason, Donvetis Franklin, Donovan Arp, Derrick Lewis, Chance Mock, and Marcus McKenzie.

On Wednesday, April 26, 2006, Deion Sanders, the multi-talented athlete who retired from playing in the NFL, became one of the franchise's owners[1].

On May 7, 2006, the Wranglers clinched their first ever playoff berth with a win over the Grand Rapids Rampage. Unfortunately the Wranglers were eliminated from the playoffs after losing to the Philadelphia Soul in the first round of the wild card playoffs.

Shortly after the end of the Wranglers' season, team owner Doug MacGregor announced the firing of Skip Foster, after leading the Wranglers to a franchise best 10-6 season. This shocking move led to many to speculate what the Wrangler's intentions were for the future.

After a month full of searching for the future head coach of the Wranglers, Austin announced on June 29, 2006, former offensive coordinator of the Colorado Crush, Brian Partlow, would lead the Wranglers in 2007. During his three seasons as offensive coordinator with the Crush, Partlow established a respected offense in the AFL, in which managed to win one Arena Bowl. Along with this success, Partlow coached offensive specialist Damian Harrell to two consecutive offensive player of the year seasons, while establishing John Dutton, cover boy of EA Sport's Arena Football, as one of the most feared quarterbacks in the league.

On September 15, 2006, the Arena Football League sent shockwaves through its fanbase announcing the implentation of free-substitution, substantially eliminating any remains of the AFL's highly reguarded reputation of Ironman football. Previously teams were restricted one substitution per quarter, forcing wide receivers, defensive backs, offensive and defensive linemen to play both sides of the ball. It was highly believed teams would take advantage of this change, in increasing signings of former NFL and NFL Europe players rather than searching for existing talent already in the AFL. A month later in October, the Wranglers quickly proved this theory.

After a relatively quiet opening to the free agency period with the signing of former Georgia Force defensive specialist Nate Coogins, the Wranglers took advantage of the AFL's free-substitution rule, signing of a rather large batch of rookies lacking experience in the arena game including former Texas Longhorn Mike Williams. In addition, the Wranglers signed 2004 AFL Rookie of the Year and former Florida State Seminoles quarterback Adrian McPherson.

Following training camp 2007, the Wranglers roster was set as seven rookies made the cut (nearly a fourth of the team), while Adrian McPherson, Nate Coogins, Anthony Hines, and Chad Dukes were the lone AFL veteran free agent pick ups making the squad. The rest of the roster remained the core nucleus of the Wrangler's playoff run in 2006, including starting defensive specialist Damon Mason and stand out wide receiver Derrick Lewis.

On October 12, 2007, the team announced that they were moving from the AFL to the af2. [1]

[edit] Team Roster

Uniform # Player Position Height Weight (lb)
1 Adrian McPherson QB 6'3" 218
2 Damon Mason DS 5'9" 185
3 Mark Lewis K 5'11" 200
7 Deveron Harper DB 5'11" 200
9 Anthony Hines WR 5'11" 185
12 Lang Campbell QB 6'1" 210
17 Sakeen Wright WR/DB 6'3" 225
18 Otis Amey WR 5'10" 192
24 Nate Coggins DS 6'1" 215
28 Kevin Nickerson WR/DB 5'8" 185
32 Chad Dukes FB/LB 6'1" 255
37 Greg Brown LB 6'1" 205
40 Dane Krager FB/LB/DL 6'3" 240
41 Akarika Dawn FB 6'0" 240
49 Aaron Humphrey OL 6"4" 265
56 Donny Klein OL 6'1" 296
57 Eric Thomas OL 6'3" 300
73 Donovan Arp OL/DL 6'3" 285
75 Craig Heimburger OL/DL 6'3" 325
87 Derrick Lewis WR 6'2" 185
90 Terrance Ford DL 6'2" 311
91 Ramon Richardson OL/DL 6'2" 295
95 Mike Williams DL 6'3" 245
98 Rob Schroeder OL/DL 6'4" 285

[edit] Season-by-season

Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties

Season W L T Finish Playoff results
Austin Wranglers (AFL)
2004 8 8 0 4th NC Southern --
2005 6 10 0 5th NC Southern --
2006 10 6 0 2nd NC Southern Lost Wild Card (Philadelphia)
2007 4 12 0 5th NC Southern --
Austin Wranglers (af2)
2008 -- -- -- -- --
Totals 28 37 0 (including playoffs)

[edit] Head coaches

[edit] Radio and television

Currently the Wranglers flagship radio station is 1300 The Zone "The Longhorn's Station." For home games, former Wrangler and Texas Longhorn players Aaron Humphrey and Chance Mock provide color commentary, while 1300 regular Erin Hogan covers play by play. On the road, Wranglers general manager Glyn Milburn provides color commentary, with Austin Wranglers Director of Marketing & Media Kent Koen taking on play by play duties. Live online streams of 1300's game broadcasts may also be heard on austinwranglers.com.

In addition to game broadcasts, on Monday night's 1300 also airs the Wrangler Round-Up, an hour long interview with head coach Brian Partlow discussing the week's past game and looking ahead to the next match.

As far as television, Wrangler broadcasts widely vary with games on either Fox Sports Net or AFL Net (the league's live game streaming program). Flagship AFL station ESPN did not schedule Wrangler regular season games this year, though will cover all AFL playoff games this June and July.

[edit] Trivia

The original mascot for the Austin Wranglers was named Blaze, who was a horse, and in 2005 he was joined by a cowboy - Red Eye (whose eyes glowed red). Due to the expansion team in Utah, the Blaze, the Austin Wranglers changed the name of their mascot to avoid confusion, so the new mascot is now wilder than before and goes by the name Trigger.


[edit] External links


Austin Wranglers seasons
v  d  e

2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007

af2
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
EASTERN DIVISION

Albany Conquest
Mahoning Valley Thunder
Manchester Wolves
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers

MIDWESTERN DIVISION

Cincinnati Jungle Kats
Green Bay Blizzard
Louisville Fire
Quad City Steamwheelers

WESTERN DIVISION

Boise Burn
Central Valley Coyotes
Spokane Shock
Stockton Lightning
Tri-Cities Fever


NATIONAL CONFERENCE
CENTRAL DIVISION

Amarillo Dusters
Arkansas Twisters
Lubbock Renegades
Oklahoma City Yard Dawgz
Tulsa Talons

SOUTHWESTERN DIVISION

Bossier-Shreveport Battle Wings
Corpus Christi Sharks
Rio Grande Valley Dorados
Texas Copperheads

SOUTHERN DIVISION

Florida Firecats
South Georgia Wildcats
Tennessee Valley Vipers

2008 EXPANSION/RETURN

Austin Wranglers
Biloxi, Mississippi
Iowa Barnstormers
Lexington Horsemen
Peoria Pirates

Related articles: Arena Football League | af2 | Arena football | Indoor football
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