New Orleans VooDoo
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| New Orleans VooDoo | ||
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| Conference | National | |
| Division | Southern | |
| Year founded | 2004 | |
| Home arena | New Orleans Arena | |
| City, State | New Orleans, Louisiana | |
| Head Coach | Mike Neu | |
| ArenaBowl championships | none | |
| Conference titles | none | |
| Division titles | 1: 2004 | |
| Wild Card berths | none | |
The New Orleans VooDoo is a team in the Arena Football League, and is owned in part by Tom Benson, who also owns the National Football League New Orleans Saints. The VooDoo competes in the Southern Division of the National Conference, playing their home games at the New Orleans Arena, which they share with the National Basketball Association New Orleans Hornets. The Arena is located directly across from the Saints' home, the Louisiana Superdome.
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[edit] History
An AFL expansion team, the VooDoo played its inaugural game on the road against the Philadelphia Soul on February 8 2004. The team logo, consisting of a skull wearing a top hat and sunglasses, is unique even by Arena Football standards.
In their first year, they drew big crowds to their home games as they became the second team other than the Orlando Predators or Tampa Bay Storm to win the AFL's Southern Division. The team's average attendance of 15,240 ranked fifth in the league and was a major factor in the VooDoo's 7-1 regular season home record.
In 2005, the team started strong, but later found itself on the wrong end of some close, hard-fought games. With a national television audience and sold-out T.D. Waterhouse Centre looking on, the VooDoo ended their second regular season against Orlando with both needing a win to reach the playoffs. A second half rally featuring a fumble return for a touchdown by Thabiti Davis brought the VooDoo back into the game briefly, but the VooDoo's backs were broken when a Jay Taylor kickoff hit the iron surrounding the nets and was recovered by the Predators, which, after another touchdown to bring the lead up to 15, effectively sealed the game and ensured the VooDoo would watch the playoffs from home. The final score was 51-40, ending the VooDoo's season at 9-7, a disappointing result for a team widely expected to challenge for the ArenaBowl championship.
Despite the underachievement, the VooDoo proved to be hits with New Orleans for the second consecutive year, with an average attendance of 15,338, good for third in the 17-team AFL, and again had the New Orleans market lead the nation in television ratings for Sunday AFL broadcasts on NBC.
The VooDoo's success and popularity led the AFL to consider placing the ArenaBowl in New Orleans. Although it had already signed a deal with Las Vegas to have the ArenaBowl in that city for 2005, 2006 and 2007, the league had considered terminating that deal. Had the bidding for ArenaBowl XX begun, New Orleans would have been an early favorite, along with Orlando and Arizona. The VooDoo's official mascots are Bones and Mojo.[1]
[edit] Hurricane Katrina
On September 28, 2005, it was announced that due to the extensive damage suffered by Hurricane Katrina to the New Orleans Arena, the VooDoo would suspend operations for the 2006 season. Fifteen of the players under contract with the VooDoo were moved to the expansion Kansas City Brigade for the 2006 season. The team returned in 2007 with Neu as the head coach. New Orleans Arena will host ArenaBowl XXI.
[edit] Return in 2007
In 2007, the VooDoo set an AFL season ticket record, selling over 13,000 season tickets. This led to the VooDoo leading in announced attendance as well, drawing 16,645 to their 8 home games, 800 more than the second-place Philadelphia Soul
The VooDoo started 4-3, before a 7 game losing streak dropped them to 4-10 and eliminated them from the playoff race.
The final record of 5-11 included the first ever victory by the VooDoo over the Orlando Predators, a dominating 67-54 victory over the eventual ArenaBowl XXI champion San Jose Sabercats, a 78-34 nationally televised defeat at the Philadelphia Soul that ranks as the worst loss in franchise history, a 69-63 nationally televised loss to the New York Dragons where the VooDoo used some curious strategy to run the clock down before going for the winning score on fourth down, and a narrow 80-79 defeat at the Dallas Desperados, in which the VooDoo missed a two-point conversion to try to win the game after regulation time expired.
Despite the terrible record, several players were revelations for the VooDoo. Steve Bellisari, a former Ohio State quarterback, took over the starting job from AFL legend Andy Kelly and showed no signs of giving it back anytime soon as the VooDoo offense became more efficient later in the season. Johnathan Ruffin, a New Orleans native and former Lou Groza award winner, took over kicking duties late in the season and was far more efficient than his predecessor Eric Houle. James Lynch was named to the all-Rookie team at fullback.
[edit] Season-by-season
Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties
| Season | W | L | T | Finish | Playoff results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 11 | 5 | 0 | 1st NC Southern | Lost Week 1 (Colorado) | |
| 2005 | 9 | 7 | 0 | 4th NC Southern | -- | |
| 2006 | Did Not Play | |||||
| 2007 | 5 | 11 | 0 | 4th NC Southern | -- | |
| 2008 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | |
| Totals | 25 | 24 | 0 | (including playoffs) | ||
[edit] Head coaches
- 2004-Current: Mike Neu, 25-23
[edit] Notable players
- 2004, 2007: Dan Curran
- 2004-2005:Monty Montgomery
- 2005, 2007: Andy Kelly
- 2007: Henry Taylor
- 2007: Tyronne Jones
[edit] External links
- New Orleans VooDoo Official Website
- New Orleans VooDoo at ArenaFan.com
- New Orleans VooDoo fan forum at VooDooReport.com
New Orleans VooDoo seasons
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