National Women's Football Association

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National Women's Football Association

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National Women's Football Association
Sport American football
Founded 2000
No. of teams 1
Country(ies)  United States
Most recent champion(s) H-Town Texas Cyclones (now in WFA)

The National Women's Football Association (NWFA) was a full-contact American football league for women headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee. The league was founded by Catherine Masters in 2000, as the two benchmark teams, the Alabama Renegades and the Nashville Dream played each other six times in exhibition games. The opening season was in 2001 featuring eight teams. The NWFA was originally called the National Women's Football League, but changed its name after the 2002 season. The name change came after pressure from the National Football League. The NFL also required the league to change the logos of some teams whose logo resembled those of NFL teams. The NWFA did not officially field any teams for the 2009 season.

Catherine Masters was inducted into the American Football Association's Semi Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2006

NWFA teams play according to standard National Football League rules with the following notable exceptions:

  • TDY-sized football
  • only one foot in-bounds is required for a reception
  • no blocking below the waist downfield
  • kickoff takes place on the 35 yard line.
Contents

List of teams

2009 teams

  • Tree Town Spitfire

Teams that left the NWFA for another league

Defunct teams

  • Antelope Valley Bombers
  • Arizona Wildfire
  • Asheville Assault
  • Atlanta Leopards
  • Evansville Express
  • Gulf Coast Herricanes
  • Indiana Thunder
  • Indianapolis Chaos
  • Junction City Jaguars
  • Kansas City Krunch
  • Knoxville Summit
  • Knoxville Tornadoes
  • Maine Freeze
  • Muscle Shoals SmasHers
  • Nashville Dream
  • Richmond Dream
  • Roanoke Revenge
  • Rochester Raptors
  • South Bend GoldenHawks
  • Tennessee Venom
  • Tidewater Floods
  • Wisconsin Riverters

Championship Games

See also

References

  1. ^ Organ, Mike (2007-07-22). "Passion grounds Comets for title". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07203/803626-66.stm. Retrieved 2008-09-17. 

External links


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