American_West_Football_Conference

American West Football Conference

American West Football Conference

American football minor league


The American West Football Conference (AWFC) was a professional indoor American football minor league created in 2018 by Platinum Events & Security, LLC, the owners of the Idaho Horsemen. The league's inaugural season was in 2019.[2]

Quick Facts Sport, Founded ...

Players are paid $150 per game before taxes with no other benefits, although the teams help the players find host families during the season.[3] Teams' operating budget is $200,000 per season.[3]

The league had an inter-league scheduling agreement with the American Indoor Football Alliance.[4][5]

History

After being unable to join the Indoor Football League or Champions Indoor Football citing league instability, as well as financial and travel issues due to the distance from the rest of the leagues' teams, Chris Reynolds, owner of the Idaho Horsemen announced that his ownership group Platinum Events & Security, LLC, created a new indoor league, the American West Football Conference (AWFC).[6] The league was created to fill the void of a lack of west coast teams and leagues and to decrease travel costs of operating the regional teams.[2][7] The league was announced with four teams: the Horsemen, Reno Express, Tri-Cities Fire, and the Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks. The AWFC later added the Sacramento Spartans, but the team's facilities did not meet league standards and was removed a month before the start of the season.[8]

The first game in league history was the Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks at the Idaho Horsemen on March 23, where the Horsemen won 33–22.[9] The season's first forfeit came on May 4 when the Skyhawks did not travel to play the Reno Express, who instead played a local semiprofessional team in order to fulfill its lease agreement. The following week, the only scheduled game was also postponed citing travel issues with the Tri-Cities Fire visiting Idaho, but was made-up on June 19. Idaho went undefeated and won the championship game 40–20 over Reno.

For the 2020 season, the league announced expansion teams in Yakima, Washington,[10] and the San Francisco Bay Area,[11] although the Bay Area team never launched.[12] In February 2020, the Reno Express was removed from the schedule[13] and the Tri-Cities Fire folded,[14] which led to the Idaho Horsemen and Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks both announce they would play independent schedules.[15][16] The league then announced it would be playing the 2020 season with three teams — Idaho, Wenatchee, and Yakima — while looking for non-league teams to fill in the lost games including the minor outdoor team, Tri-City Rage, filling in for the Fire's six scheduled away games.[17]

On March 13, 2020, the AWFC announced on its website that the 2020 season would be postponed due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, citing the high number of cases reported from Washington, one of two states that had a team in the league.[18] On July 31, 2020, the AWFC announced the cancellation of the 2020 season due to the unavailability of arenas during the pandemic.[19] On September 28, 2020, the league announced a new expansion team in the state of Oregon for the 2021 season[20] called the Oregon High Desert Storm.[21] On November 13, 2020, the Tri-Cities were announced as the league's new franchise named the Tri-City Rush.[22][23]

On November 22, 2022, league champions Tri-City Rush announced they were folding after their home arena in Pasco shut down for the 2023 season[24] and not meeting their financial goals.[25] With only three teams for the 2023 season, the AWFC announced they would play non-league games with four teams from the American Indoor Football Alliance, and the Cali Gold (San Francisco Bay area) from the American Arena League 2.[26] The Idaho Horsemen defeated the Oregon High Desert Storm 42–20 on July 2, 2023, to win the league championship.[27]

On September 21, 2023, the Horsemen were announced as joining the National Arena League for the 2024 season.[28]

Teams

2023

More information Team, Location ...
    High Desert Storm
    High Desert Storm
    Location of AWFC teams

    Former teams

    • Washington Elite/Northwest Elite (N/A) – Travel team in 2022.
    • Idaho Horsemen (Nampa, Idaho ) – left for the National Arena League in the 2024 season.
    • Reno Express (Reno, Nevada) – played the 2019 season but withdrew from the 2020 season.[13]
    • SoCal Redtails (City of Industry, California) – originally the San Diego Red Tails; joined for the 2022 season but never played.[32] The independent Cali Gold was scheduled to fill in for one home game against the Oregon High Desert Storm.[33][34]
    • Tri-Cities Fire (Kennewick, Washington) – played the 2019 season and folded before the 2020 season.[17]
    • Tri-City Rush (Pasco, Washington) – played the 2021 and 2022 seasons. Folded in November 2022.[25]
    • Yakima Canines (Yakima, Washington) – joined for the 2020 season before it was cancelled due to the pandemic, played the 2021 season, and the franchise was revoked prior to the 2022 season due to not meeting league minimum operating requirements. The Canines were replaced by the Washington Elite travel team to fill the rest of the league's home schedule.[24]

    Seasons

    2019 season

    Standings

    Final standings.[35]

    More information 2019 American West Football Conference, Team ...

    y – clinched regular season title

    x – clinched playoff spot

    Playoffs

    Semifinal Final
    3 Reno Express 20
    3 Reno Express 28 1 Idaho Horsemen 40[36][37]
    2 Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks 27

    2021 season

    Standings

    Final standings.[38]

    More information 2021 American West Football Conference, Team ...

    y – clinched regular season title

    x – clinched playoff spot

    Playoffs

    Semifinals
    (August 30)
    American West Bowl II
    (September 4)
    3 Idaho Horsemen 27
    3 Idaho Horsemen 55 1 Tri-City Rush 36
    2 Oregon High Desert Storm 37

    2022 season

    Standings

    Final standings.[39]

    More information 2022 American West Football Conference, Team ...

    y – clinched regular season title

    x – clinched playoff spot

    Playoffs

    Semifinals
    (June 26)
    American West Bowl III[40]
    (July 10)
    3 Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks 32
    3 Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks 80 1 Tri-City Rush 57
    2 Idaho Horsemen 70

    References

    1. "NEW AWFC COMMISSIONER". AWFC. October 29, 2020.
    2. "HISTORY". Official Website. October 15, 2018. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
    3. "A DECISION HAS BEEN MADE". AWFC Insider. October 15, 2018.
    4. Castete, Aaron (October 21, 2018). "Western US based indoor football league forming for 2019". Arena Football Talk. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
    5. "LETTER FROM THE COMMISSIONER". AWFC. February 20, 2019.
    6. "YAKIMA CANINES JOIN AWFC". AWFC. September 11, 2019.
    7. "A NEW AWFC TEAM IN THE BAY AREA". AWFC. November 15, 2019.
    8. "AWFC Facebook post January 13, 2020". Facebook. January 13, 2020.
    9. "2020 AWFC Season Postponed due to Coronavirus". www.americanwestfootballconference.com. March 13, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
    10. "THE AWFC CANCELS THE 2020 SEASON DUE TO COVID-19". American West Football Conference. July 31, 2020. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
    11. "Coming to the Expo!". expo.deshutes.org. October 20, 2020.
    12. Darby, Uriah (October 9, 2018). "Evening News October 9, 2018". NCW Life Channel. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
    13. "2022 season schedule". AWFC. Retrieved August 16, 2023.
    14. "AWFC Standings". AWFC. Retrieved June 27, 2019.
    15. "AWFC Standings". AWFC. Retrieved August 15, 2021.
    16. "AWFC Standings". AWFC. Retrieved August 16, 2022.

    Share this article:

    This article uses material from the Wikipedia article American_West_Football_Conference, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.