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Michigan Panthers

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Michigan Panthers
Michigan Panthers

Michigan Panthers were a professional American football team that played in the United States Football League in the mid 1980s.

Team History

The Michigan Panthers were named as a charter member of the United States Football League (USFL) on May 11, 1982.

A. Alfred Taubman, one of the nation's leading real estate developers, headed the ownership group that included Judge Peter B. Spivak and Max M. Fisher.

The Panthers named fomer CFL executive, Jim Spavital as it's first General Manager on August 26, 1982. Michigan then hired Jim Stanley as its' first Head Coach on November 18, 1982. Stanley was head coach at Oklahoma State University.

The Pontiac Silverdome (Cap. 80,638) was home of the Panthers for each of the two seasons the club was active.



The Panthers won the first USFL championship in 1983. The team had reasonable fan support playing at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac. The championship game drew over 47,000 spectators. However after the 1984 season was over, the USFL, largely under the influence of New Jersey Generals owner Donald Trump, decided to go to a fall schedule, effective with the 1986 season. This would have meant the Panthers being locked out of the Silverdome, which was then also home to the NFL's Detroit Lions. The Panthers merged with the Oakland Invaders for the 1985 USFL season. After this season, when the USFL received on $3 in its antitrust lawsuit against the NFL, a lawsuit on which it had staked its survival, the USFL folded.

Single Season Leaders

Rushing Yards: 1182 (1983), Ken Lacy

Receiving Yards: 1220 (1984), Derek Holloway

Passing Yards: 3368 (1984), Bobby Hebert

Season-By-Season

Season records
Season W L T Finish Playoff results
1983 12 6 0 1st Central Won Divisional (Oakland)
Won USFL Championship (Philadelphia)
1984 10 8 0 2nd WC Central Lost Quarterfinal (Los Angeles)1
Totals 24 15 0 (including playoffs)

1 - Lost to Los Angeles 27-21 in triple overtime, in longest game in professional football history.